Chapter 1: Hong Kong, China, and the West
Part I: Colonial Foundations
Chapter 2: The Original Inheritance
Chapter 3: Crown Colony Rule, 1841–1941
Chapter 4: Chinese "Self-Government"
Part II: Autocrats, Communists, and Reformers
Chapter 5: New Beginnings, Old Solutions
Chapter 6: The Cold War Reaches Hong Kong
Chapter 7: Showcase Democracy
Chapter 8: A 1960s Rebellion and Its Aftermath
Chapter 9: Progress without Political Reform
Chapter 10: Political Reform without Independence
Chapter 11: A Political Community in the Making
Chapter 12: Better Late Than Never?
Part III: Under Chinese Rule
Chapter 13: Crossing the 1997 Divide
Chapter 14: Reaffirmation and Retreat
Chapter 15: Conservative Counter-Currents
Chapter 16: Checkmate
Suzanne Pepper is an American writer and long-time Hong Kong resident. She is the author, among other works, of Civil War in China: The Political Struggle, 1945–1949, Second Edition (Rowman & Littlefield). For regular updates on Hong Kong politics see the author's blog at http://chinaelectionsblog.net/hkfocus
This book is a commendable effort which not only offers insight
into the critical issues surrounding Hong Kong's political history
but also appeals to the imagination by allowing the reader to get
as close as possible to voices of the past. As such, it would be a
useful point of reference for scholars of Chinese history, politics
and international affairs.
*The China Journal*
Fascinating.
*China Review*
It certainly is refreshing to see a book which goes against common
wisdom on this subject. It is, as a whole, notable for its very
thorough criticism of the British authorities. . . . Pepper's book
provides a necessary overview of a very important question in
modern Chinese history.
*China Quarterly*
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