Routledge Handbook of Contemporary Hong KongTai-lok Lui, Stephen W.K. Chiu, Ray Yep Routledge, 2018年7月17日 - 552 頁 When Britain and China negotiated the future of Hong Kong in the early 1980s, their primary concern was about maintaining the status quo. The rise of China in the last thirty years, however, has reshaped the Beijing-Hong Kong dynamic as new tensions and divisions have emerged. Thus, post-1997 Hong Kong is a case about a global city’s democratic transition within an authoritarian state. The Routledge Handbook of Contemporary Hong Kong introduces readers to these key social, economic, and political developments. Bringing together the work of leading researchers in the field, it focuses on the process of transition from a British colony to a Special Administrative Region under China’s sovereign rule. Organized thematically, the sections covered include:
This book provides a thorough introduction to Hong Kong today. As such, it will be invaluable to students and scholars of Hong Kong’s politics, culture and society. It will also be of interest to those studying Chinese political development and the impact of China’s rise more generally. |
搜尋書籍內容
第 6 到 10 筆結果,共 84 筆
... colony. Hong Kong would be a capitalist SAR under the sovereignty of socialist China. How such a settlement would be put into practice has been probably the most challenging question encountered by Hong Kong since 1997. What our ...
... colonial government was becoming more responsive , the government's provisions of social services were improving , and most importantly the colony was largely unaffected by those political campaigns across the border . The central ideas ...
... colonial system of 'functional constituency' – an electoral arrangement premised on limited franchise for business interests and professionals – had been fully incorporated into the post-1997 political order. Half of the seats of the ...
... colonial oppression and/or injustice. Given the rapid pace of economic growth and development in the post-war decades, and thus new openings in the upper part of the social ladder had been created, many families were able to see ...
... colonial rule or in the beginning of the SAR regime . In fact , people were surprisingly calm , showing little emotion about this eye - catching world media event . The holiday from 28 June to 2 July was more like a long weekend than a ...
內容
1958 | |
1982 | |
1992 | |
1994 | |
1996 | |
Learning to live with China and a changing Hong Kong | |
Maintaining two systems in the midst | |
Tables | |
Ethnic minorities and ethnicity in Hong Kong | |
Youth and the changing opportunity structure | |
birth cohort | |
Hong Kongs middle class after 1997 | |
and Wales and the United Kingdom from 1991 to mid2010s | |
2a Real Salary Index A for middlelevel managerial and professional employees | |
A genealogy of business and politics in Hong Kong | |
The real estate elite and real estate hegemony | |
Disarticulation fragmentation | |
AI The evolution of the composition of the Legislative Council of the Hong Kong | |
Social mobilization | |
In search of a new relationship between | |
The precarious development of civic engagement | |
Party underdevelopment in protracted transition | |
From the July 1 demonstration to | |
From talk radio to internet alternative websites | |
Social media and social mobilization | |
Legal mobilization | |
Transformative events and their frames and repertoires of contention | |
Growing socioeconomic inequalities | |
Pathways to China after the golden | |
19701985 | |
A1 Screening boxoffice takes and market share of local movies and imported | |
End of a chapter? Hong Kong manufacturers in the Pearl River Delta | |
Chinese state capitalism in Hong Kong | |
Contesting the local the national and the global | |
Political deinstitutionalization and the rise of rightwing nativism | |
Hong Kongs integration with Mainland China in historical perspective | |
Rethinking Hong Kong Shanghai and Shenzhen as a | |
Index | |