Blog

Welcome to the official website of Transformative Justice Collective (TJC), based in Singapore! Click here to find out more about TJC’s work and how you can support our movement. If you’re interested in the abolition of the death penalty, check out the #StopTheKilling campaign website and join us in our call for an immediate moratorium on executions in Singapore.

“Security” and Capitalism in Singapore: TJC Public Webinar

TJC’s first public webinar in 2024 will look at how Singapore’s authoritarian government uses narratives of crime control, deviance and security to protect capitalist interests and the symbolic power of the state. Through the lens of critical criminology, Joe Greener and Eve Yeo will explore how “criminal justice” is used to realise a series of…

Civil Society Statement Against the Criminal Law (Temporary Provisions) Act

On 2 April 2024, Parliament sat for the 2nd reading of the Criminal Law (Temporary Provisions) Bill. The bill extends the Minister of Home Affair’s power to detain individuals indefinitely in the interest of “public safety, peace and good order”. If passed, the ‘temporary’ law will be extended for the 15th time since 1955. This…

The Death Penalty Does Not Stop Crimes (Part 3)

The myth that the death penalty deters people from committing crime is the biggest argument that the Singapore government makes in favour of the death penalty. However, Dr Mai Sato analysed studies carried out by the Ministry of Home Affairs that claimed to prove the effectiveness of the death penalty for drug trafficking and found…

Do Singaporeans really support the Death Penalty? (Part 2)

Continuing our series that draws from Dr Mai Sato’s article, let’s unpack why it’s a lie that there is strong support for the death penalty. Minister K. Shanmugam has repeatedly claimed that an “overwhelming majority” of Singaporeans support the death penalty, citing a statistic that 66% of Singaporeans agree with the mandatory death sentence for…

Criminal Procedure (Miscellaneous) Amendments Bill 2024

On 5 Feb 2024, parliament passed amendments to the Criminal Procedure Code. The amendments majorly expands police powers, including the introduction of powers to search without warrant, and criminalising the refusal to consent to forensic medical examinations if you are under investigation.

This Week In Court

For our last TWIC post this year, we took out some of our case notes from court hearings we observed over the last few months that we hadn’t included in previous reports. These cases reinforce some of the patterns that have been consistent across our experiences reporting on court proceedings over the course of this…

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