Florence Mok
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The campaign to reopen the Precious Blood Golden Jubilee Secondary School
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"The Golden Jubilee incident from 1977 to 1978 was ‘an eye-opener’ for the public, in particular those with a conservative mindset. To obtain attention from senior civil servants, the teachers and students exposed an example of ‘corruption’ to the public through the organisation of sits-in and hunger strikes. During the campaign, the activists displayed remarkable capacity for organisation. The networking capacity of activists gave them an effective way of communicating with post-secondary students, educational and religious organisations, and even MPs in London. Their campaigning pressurised the colonial government to set up a Committee of Inquiry, and to monitor public opinion closely. The campaign also showed how the political culture of the educated young generation was changing. These students engaged in different forms of political acts and gained support from their peers and politicians. Despite considerable support from the post-secondary students and educational sector, the campaign however failed to enlist support from the general public. Political conservatism was still prevalent, partly because of the 1967 riots, which cast a shadow on the society. Moreover, concepts such as ‘injustice’, ‘democracy’ and ‘anti-colonialism’ propagated by the activists were unappealing to people who were concerned primarily with their livelihoods. They lacked enthusiasm to engage in debates about how the state was governing a colonial society.

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Covert colonialism

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

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