Agnes Ku / Ngai Pun (eds.)Remaking Citizenship in Hong Kong
Community, Nation and the Global City
Herausgeber: Ku, Agnes S.; Pun, Ngai
List of TablesAcknowledgmentsForeword Introduction 1. Introduction:
Remaking Citizenship in Hong Kong Part 1: State, Institutions, and
Ideologies 2. Citizenship as a Form of Governance: A Historical Overview3.
Welfare Good or Colonial Citizenship? A Case Study of Early Resettlement
Housing4. Civic Education and the Making of Deformed Citizenry: From
British Colony to Chinese Sar5. The Making of 'Ideal Citizen' in Schooling
Processes: Gender, Differences and Inequalities Part 2: Migration,
Belonging, and Exclusion 6. Politics of Incorporation and Exclusion:
Citizenship and Immigration Issues7. Hong Kong as a Semi-Ethnocracy:
'Race', Migration, and Citizenship in a Globalized Region8. Lived
Citizenship and Lower Class Chinese Migrant Women: A Global City without
its People Part 3: Civil Society, Resistance, and Participation 9.
Negotiating Law, Rights, and Civil Autonomy: From the Colonial to the
Post-Colonial Regimes10. En-Gendering Citizenship11. (Post-)Identity
Politics and Anti-Normalization: (Homo)Sexual Rights Movement12. In Search
of Communal Economic Subject - Reflections on a Local Community Currency
Project13. One Country, Three Systems? State, Nation, and Civil Society in
the Making of Citizenship in the Chinese Triangle of Mainland-Taiwan-Hong
KongIndexContributors