Can Hong Kong exceptionalism last? Dilemmas of governance and public administration over five decades 1970s-2020
Public Administration and Policy
; 25(1):6-12, 2022.
Article
in English
| ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-1831712
ABSTRACT
Purpose>The purpose of this book launch speech is to introduce the book I author, Can Hong Kong exceptionalism last? Dilemmas of governance and public administration over five decades 1970s-2020 (2021). The book critically reviews the governance and public administration from 1970s to 2020, identifying strengths and capabilities as well as constraints and dilemmas.Design/methodology/approach>The book is based on my decades of academic observations and personal political experience by interpreting and re-interpreting the Hong Kong journey, with reflections on past assumptions and raising new questions.Findings>This book identifies five exceptional aspects (a) Under British rule Hong Kong was governed as an atypical colony;(b) It was one of the Four Little Dragons as part of the East Asian Miracle;(c) In the 1990s, it was one of the regional pioneers in public sector reform;(d) The unique constitutional status of post-1997 Hong Kong as a Special Administrative Region (SAR) of China;(e) After reunification, the SAR government, though only semi-democratic, is checked by balancing and monitoring mechanisms no less vigorous than some developed democracies. It also examines various governance problems faced in the post-1997 period.Originality/value>Hong Kong is again in times of uncertainty and volatility. The city has entered a ‘second transition’ after 2020, and it is undergoing a bigger test than in 1997. After reviewing the past, I opine in the book that Hong Kong has to identify its niche areas, not only in economics. It needs a paradigm shift in how it relates to the Mainland within ‘One Country’ and how it relates to the world as a global metropolis.
Public Administration; Hong Kong; Governance; Exceptionalism; Airports; Economic summit conferences; National security; Bureaucracy; Civil service; Politics; Corruption; Sovereignty; Political appointments; International finance; Coronaviruses; Extradition; Cities; COVID-19; Accountability; New York; South Korea; Singapore; United States--US; China
Full text:
Available
Collection:
Databases of international organizations
Database:
ProQuest Central
Language:
English
Journal:
Public Administration and Policy
Year:
2022
Document Type:
Article
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