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Book Chapter: Empires Collaborate: Geopolitics of Colonial Policing in Hong Kong (1880s–1970s)

TitleEmpires Collaborate: Geopolitics of Colonial Policing in Hong Kong (1880s–1970s)
Authors
Issue Date8-Jun-2023
Abstract

To date, most scholarly work on historical Hong Kong policing has focused on the relationship between the governing and governed within a local setting. This approach explains policing solely within the confines of the juxtaposition of the authoritarian power of the colonial government on the one hand with the individual rights and liberties of the colonized on the other. This chapter, which draws upon archival documents from the nineteenth and twentieth centuries showing how public media in Hong Kong were systematically censored, placed under police surveillance, and prosecuted for political reasons, argues that collaboration among the imperial empires to safeguard their interests in East Asia contributed significantly to Hong Kong policing during that period. Hence, this chapter argues that Hong Kong policing was historically not solely a matter of domestic authoritarian governance but also an issue of global geopolitical relevance. Analyzing colonial Hong Kong policing based on the conventional framework of human rights or colonial inequality and racism without considering the bigger picture of global and regional politics is, this chapter argues, seriously inadequate. The bigger picture is the political-economic situation of China, China’s relations with the major world powers, and those powers’ China strategies over time, as this chapter’s archival discovery will discuss.


Persistent Identifierhttp://hdl.handle.net/10722/333997
ISBN

 

DC FieldValueLanguage
dc.contributor.authorNg, Michael-
dc.date.accessioned2023-10-16T06:52:19Z-
dc.date.available2023-10-16T06:52:19Z-
dc.date.issued2023-06-08-
dc.identifier.isbn9781009045421-
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10722/333997-
dc.description.abstract<p>To date, most scholarly work on historical Hong Kong policing has focused on the relationship between the governing and governed within a local setting. This approach explains policing solely within the confines of the juxtaposition of the authoritarian power of the colonial government on the one hand with the individual rights and liberties of the colonized on the other. This chapter, which draws upon archival documents from the nineteenth and twentieth centuries showing how public media in Hong Kong were systematically censored, placed under police surveillance, and prosecuted for political reasons, argues that collaboration among the imperial empires to safeguard their interests in East Asia contributed significantly to Hong Kong policing during that period. Hence, this chapter argues that Hong Kong policing was historically not solely a matter of domestic authoritarian governance but also an issue of global geopolitical relevance. Analyzing colonial Hong Kong policing based on the conventional framework of human rights or colonial inequality and racism without considering the bigger picture of global and regional politics is, this chapter argues, seriously inadequate. The bigger picture is the political-economic situation of China, China’s relations with the major world powers, and those powers’ China strategies over time, as this chapter’s archival discovery will discuss.<br></p>-
dc.languageeng-
dc.relation.ispartofRegime Type and Beyond: The Transformation of Police in Asia-
dc.titleEmpires Collaborate: Geopolitics of Colonial Policing in Hong Kong (1880s–1970s)-
dc.typeBook_Chapter-
dc.identifier.doi10.1017/9781009042154.016-
dc.identifier.spage291-
dc.identifier.epage315-
dc.identifier.eisbn9781009042154-

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