Governing Hong Kong: Administrative Officers from the 19th Century to the Handover to China, 1862-1997Bloomsbury Academic, 2007年10月24日 - 240 頁 Hong Kong is at the heart of modern China's position as a regional - and potential world - superpower. In this important and original history of the region, Steve Tsang argues that its current prosperity is a direct by-product of the British administrators who ran the place as a colony before the handover in 1997.The British administration of Hong Kong uniquely derived its practices from the best traditions of Imperial Chinese government and its philosophical, Confucian basis. It stressed efficiency, honesty, fairness, benevolent paternalism and individual freedom. The result was a hugely successful colony, especially in industry and finance, and it remains so today with its new status of Special Administrative Region of the People's Republic of China.Under British imperial administration, Hong Kong grew from a collection of fishing villages to an international entrepot, an industrial power and an international financial centre. British and Chinese interests dovetailed and the Chinese population was satisfied by the welfare reform and economic advancement perpetuated by Britain's administrative officers. |
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... Ian Strachan , Simon Vickers , Patrick Williamson , and Michael Wright either wrote to me at length about their ... Ian Lightbody for three photographs : two of himself and a group photograph of cadets in 1957 ; ☐ Selwyn Alleyne for ...
... Ian Lightbody during her first visit to Hong Kong ( 1975 ) . Behind the Queen is Governor Assistant Colonial Secretary ( Lands ) Ian Lightbody visiting a. 151 Meeting the challenges of modernity.
... Ian Lightbody visiting a Buddhist Temple . Housing Department Office Party 1973. Secretary for Housing Ian Lightbody. 164 Governing Hong Kong.
內容
Governance in a colonial society | 1 |
The cadet scheme | 13 |
Benevolent paternalism | 27 |
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