Political Censorship in British Hong Kong

£22.99

Political Censorship in British Hong Kong

Freedom of Expression and the Law (1842–1997)

Law and society, sociology of law

Author: Michael Ng

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Collection: Law in Context

Language: English

Published by: Cambridge University Press

Published on: 4th August 2022

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 27 Mb

ISBN: 9781108904834


Overview

Drawing on archival materials, Michael Ng challenges the widely accepted narrative that freedom of expression in Hong Kong is a legacy of British rule of law. Demonstrating that the media and schools were pervasively censored for much of the colonial period and only liberated at a very late stage of British rule, this book complicates our understanding of how Hong Kong came to be a city that championed free speech by the late 1990s.

Primary Sources and Themes

With extensive use of primary sources, the free press, freedom of speech and judicial independence are all revealed to be products of Britain’s China strategy. Ng shows that, from the nineteenth to the twentieth century, Hong Kong’s legal history was deeply affected by China’s relations with world powers.

Historical Perspective

Demonstrating that Hong Kong’s freedoms drifted along waves of change in global politics, this book offers a new perspective on the British legal regime in Hong Kong.

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