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Statements

Subject Item
dbr:Federalism_in_Malaysia
rdfs:label
Federalism in Malaysia
rdfs:comment
Federalism in Malaysia dates back to the establishment of the Federated Malay States in Peninsular Malaysia, then known as Malaya. Federalism in Malaysia took a more concrete form with the establishment of the Federation of Malaya. The merger of Malaya with Singapore, North Borneo (now Sabah) and Sarawak further complicated the situation. As of 2008, although Malaysia is a de jure federation, many perceive it as a de facto unitary state. Some suggest that opposition triumphs in several of the 2008 state elections will alter the political climate and approach towards federalism.
dcterms:subject
dbc:Politics_of_Malaysia dbc:Law_of_Malaysia dbc:Federalism_in_Malaysia dbc:Federalism_by_country
dbo:wikiPageID
16241191
dbo:wikiPageRevisionID
1109150256
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
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wikidata:Q5440571 n12:மலேசியாவில்_கூட்டாட்சி dbpedia-ms:Fahaman_persekutuan_di_Malaysia freebase:m.03wdwyf n17:4jm8L
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dbt:Quote dbt:Reflist dbt:Malaysia_topics dbt:States_and_Federal_Territories_of_Malaysia dbt:Malaysia-poli-stub
dbo:abstract
Federalism in Malaysia dates back to the establishment of the Federated Malay States in Peninsular Malaysia, then known as Malaya. Federalism in Malaysia took a more concrete form with the establishment of the Federation of Malaya. The merger of Malaya with Singapore, North Borneo (now Sabah) and Sarawak further complicated the situation. As of 2008, although Malaysia is a de jure federation, many perceive it as a de facto unitary state. Some suggest that opposition triumphs in several of the 2008 state elections will alter the political climate and approach towards federalism.
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wikipedia-en:Federalism_in_Malaysia?oldid=1109150256&ns=0
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3457
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wikipedia-en:Federalism_in_Malaysia