Lexington Books
Pages: 254
Trim: 6¾ x 9¼
978-0-7391-0492-7 • Hardback • August 2004 • $131.00 • (£101.00)
978-0-7391-2905-0 • Paperback • June 2008 • $57.99 • (£45.00)
Wong Yiu-chung is associate professor of politics and sociology at Lingnan University, Hong Kong.
Part 1 The Principle and Its Practice
Chapter 2 "One Country" and "Two Systems": Where is the Line?
Part 3 Political and Legal Changes
Chapter 4 Taking Stock of "One Country, Two Systems"
Chapter 5 The Search for the Rule of Law in the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, 1997-2003
Part 6 State-Society Relationships
Chapter 7 The "Right of Abode" Issue: A Test Case of "One Country, Two Systems"
Chapter 8 Catholic Church Relations with the Hong Kong SAR Government: The Paradigm Shift
Chapter 9 Governance in Education in Hong Kong: A Decentralizing or a Centralizing Path?
Part 10 Hong Kong and Outside World
Chapter 11 Business as Usual?: The European Union and Hong Kong after the Handover
Chapter 12 An East-West Conundrum: Hong Kong in Between China and the United States after the Chinese Resumption of Sovereignty
Chapter 13 Compromise on Depoliticization: Post-1997 Hong Kong-Taiwan Ties under Cross-Straits Conflict
This edited volume covers a good range of topics related to post-1997 developments in Hong Kong. These include the major events and political and legal changes that shed light on the practice of 'one country, two systems' (state-society relations in the realms of education and, immigration policy, state-church relations), and Hong Kong's relationship with international actors such as the European Union, the United States, and Taiwan. All the chapters are written by scholars based in Hong Kong, and the book reflects developments accurately, in a way that can easily be understood by people outside Hong Kong. In devoting about a third of its contents to Hong Kong's changing relationship with the outside world, the book compares favorably with other edited volumes on post-1997 developments.
— Ma Kgok, Hon Kong University of Science and Technology; The China Journal
This is a timely book. Anyone interested in knowing what has happened to Hong Kong after the handover will find it informative and interesting.
— Alvin So, Hong Kong University