Florence Mok
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The British Nationality Act controversy
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In 1981, the British Nationality (Hong Kong) Act was passed, stripping the rights of abode in Britain of 2.5 million Hong Kong Chinese. This provoked ‘a sense of betrayal’. This chapter examines how people of different social classes and age groups in Hong Kong responded to the enactment of the British Nationality Act. Despite a strong sentiment of bitterness felt by the Chinese population in Hong Kong towards the British government’s policy, Britain enacted this law to prevent a future influx of immigrants. A new nationality status, British National Overseas (BN(O)), was given to Hong Kong citizens. This legislative change has had a major impact on the late colonial and post-colonial Hong Kong. The Act shaped how residents identified with Britain and Hong Kong. Using both state records and published sources, this chapter analyses the public discourse and investigates how that influenced the policymaking process. In 2020, the imposition of the national security legislation in Hong Kong by China led activists to advocate changes to the Nationality Act. The Foreign Secretary in the United Kingdom recently announced that the country would scrap the six-month stay limit for BN(O) holders, extending it to twelve months, providing a pathway to future citizenship.

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Covert colonialism

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

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