Localism in Hong Kong: Its Origins, Development and Prospect

The paper firstly aims to analyse the changing political landscape after the Legislative Council election in September 2017. Secondly, the social political context in which localism emerged is delineated. An analysis of the rise of the politics of democratization and identities in the post-Handover...

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Main Author: Yiu-chung Wong
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: National Sun Yat-sen University 2017-07-01
Series:Contemporary Chinese Political Economy and Strategic Relations: An International Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:http://icaps.nsysu.edu.tw/var/file/131/1131/img/2374/CCPS3(2)-WongYC.pdf
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spelling doaj-f83eb418dde349368e9f4de1fc6d67982020-11-24T21:43:38ZengNational Sun Yat-sen UniversityContemporary Chinese Political Economy and Strategic Relations: An International Journal2410-96812410-96812017-07-0132617655Localism in Hong Kong: Its Origins, Development and ProspectYiu-chung Wong0Lingnan University, Hong KongThe paper firstly aims to analyse the changing political landscape after the Legislative Council election in September 2017. Secondly, the social political context in which localism emerged is delineated. An analysis of the rise of the politics of democratization and identities in the post-Handover Hong Kong is provided. The policies of “One Country, Two Systems” (1C2S), initiated by the People’s Republic of China (PRC) to resolve the sovereignty issue of 1997 are discussed. It is argued that in the implementation of the 1C2S since the Handover in 1997, the Chinese party/state has shifted from non-interventionism to pervasive integration, which violates its pledges of “fifty years unchanged”. The Basic Law is arbitrarily interpreted to suit political expediency. Its Leninist absorption of Hong Kong into Chinese authoritarianism has directly triggered the rise of localism in the younger generation. The paper also explores the two theoretical discourses of the “independence” and “self-determination” narratives in contemporary Hong Kong and finally the prospect of the “independence” movement is examined.http://icaps.nsysu.edu.tw/var/file/131/1131/img/2374/CCPS3(2)-WongYC.pdf“One Country Two systems” (1C2S)localism/nativismuniversal suffragedemocratizationidentitiesnation-building movementOccupy CentralUmbrella Movement
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yiu-chung Wong
spellingShingle Yiu-chung Wong
Localism in Hong Kong: Its Origins, Development and Prospect
Contemporary Chinese Political Economy and Strategic Relations: An International Journal
“One Country Two systems” (1C2S)
localism/nativism
universal suffrage
democratization
identities
nation-building movement
Occupy Central
Umbrella Movement
author_facet Yiu-chung Wong
author_sort Yiu-chung Wong
title Localism in Hong Kong: Its Origins, Development and Prospect
title_short Localism in Hong Kong: Its Origins, Development and Prospect
title_full Localism in Hong Kong: Its Origins, Development and Prospect
title_fullStr Localism in Hong Kong: Its Origins, Development and Prospect
title_full_unstemmed Localism in Hong Kong: Its Origins, Development and Prospect
title_sort localism in hong kong: its origins, development and prospect
publisher National Sun Yat-sen University
series Contemporary Chinese Political Economy and Strategic Relations: An International Journal
issn 2410-9681
2410-9681
publishDate 2017-07-01
description The paper firstly aims to analyse the changing political landscape after the Legislative Council election in September 2017. Secondly, the social political context in which localism emerged is delineated. An analysis of the rise of the politics of democratization and identities in the post-Handover Hong Kong is provided. The policies of “One Country, Two Systems” (1C2S), initiated by the People’s Republic of China (PRC) to resolve the sovereignty issue of 1997 are discussed. It is argued that in the implementation of the 1C2S since the Handover in 1997, the Chinese party/state has shifted from non-interventionism to pervasive integration, which violates its pledges of “fifty years unchanged”. The Basic Law is arbitrarily interpreted to suit political expediency. Its Leninist absorption of Hong Kong into Chinese authoritarianism has directly triggered the rise of localism in the younger generation. The paper also explores the two theoretical discourses of the “independence” and “self-determination” narratives in contemporary Hong Kong and finally the prospect of the “independence” movement is examined.
topic “One Country Two systems” (1C2S)
localism/nativism
universal suffrage
democratization
identities
nation-building movement
Occupy Central
Umbrella Movement
url http://icaps.nsysu.edu.tw/var/file/131/1131/img/2374/CCPS3(2)-WongYC.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT yiuchungwong localisminhongkongitsoriginsdevelopmentandprospect
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