Florence Mok
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Introduction
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This introduction analyses the existing literature on decolonisation of the British empire and how Hong Kong fits in the general pattern of decolonisation. It summarises the existing scholarship on the dynamics between the political culture and public administration in Hong Kong, and examines the limitations of the theoretically driven approach adopted by political scientists and sociologists. Existing studies conducted by political scientists and sociologists were ahistorical. The contemporary context was neglected due to their over-reliance on social science theories and data generated through interviews. The definition of ‘political participation’ was also narrow. More importantly, the relationship between social class, age and political culture remains unexplored. We therefore have partial and inaccurate knowledge of colonial governance and political culture in colonial Hong Kong. Since the 1990s, revisionists have contested the notion of a ‘minimally-integrated social political system’ and have convincingly argued that it misrepresented state–society relations in Hong Kong. However, studies on ‘state’ and ‘society’ remained disjointed. They also relied on published sources, such as newspapers, student newsletters and government published reports to present case evidence. Standard historical sources, state records, have been rarely used. This book is timely and important. It is the first to use the comprehensive archival sources to explore the political culture and colonial governance in this crucial period of Hong Kong. This book poses the following questions: How did unorthodox mass political activities interact with the bureaucracy and alter the existing political establishment and order? How did political attitudes of Hong Kong Chinese of different social classes and age groups shift over time?

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Covert colonialism

Governance, surveillance and political culture in British Hong Kong, c. 1966–97

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