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The New Politics of Beijing–Hong Kong Relations

Ideological Conflicts and Factionalism

(京港關係的新政治格局:意識形態衝突與派系之爭)

Sonny Shiu-Hing Lo

ISBN : 978-988-8805-72-3


Hong Kong Politics / Democratic Movements / Beijing-Hong Kong Relations

May 2024

304 pages, 6″ x 9″, 4 b&w illus. and 17 tables


Hardback
  • HK$700.00
Forthcoming

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In The New Politics of Beijing–Hong Kong Relations, Sonny Shiu-Hing Lo looks at the diverging changes of the ideologies from both Beijing and Hong Kong and the ideological conflicts as taken in the form of factional political struggles between 2012 to the present. The book particularly examines the paternalistic authoritarianism that can be seen in Beijing's policy toward Hong Kong since the promulgation of the national security law in late June 2020.

Lo analyzes the ideological shift from liberal nationalism to conservative nationalism on the mainland Chinese side since late 2012. The increasingly radical localism on the Hong Kong side after 2014 changed Beijing-Hong Kong relations to a conflict-ridden situation characterized by factional struggles. While the imposition of the national security law into Hong Kong since late June 2020 has stabilized the city politically, Beijing's policy toward Hong Kong is now guided by the principles of protecting its national security and maintaining economic pragmatism, with implications for Beijing's relations with Taipei in the coming years.

Sonny Shiu-Hing Lo is professor and deputy director of HKU SPACE, and an acting principal of the HKU SPACE Community College.

“Professor Lo’s detailed and granular account of the clash between rising conservative nationalism in China and growing localist sentiment in Hong Kong offers an indispensable guide to the events and forces that culminate in the imposition of the national security law in 2020. This is an important contribution by a leading scholar and deserves a wide readership.”

Victor Falkenheim, University of Toronto

“Detailed, intricate, and informed, an original and forceful analysis of the ideologies and factional politics that have shaped the recent interactions of Beijing and Hong Kong in the lead up to the 2020 national security law and beyond.”

Paul Evans, University of British Columbia

“Professor Lo strikes an excellently researched, balanced but critical perspective, sharing blame for the transformation of ‘one country, two systems,’ on a naïve, radical, localist populism in the HKSAR, whose actions fed the fears of the Chinese government about threats to China’s sovereignty over Hong Kong. The resulting national security law replaced Hong Kong’s pluralist system with a paternalistic one.”

David Zweig, The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology