000 01520pab a2200169 454500
008 180718b2003 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
100 _aMoon, M. Jae
245 _aHong Kong regime transformation at the crossroads: from the politics - administration and social capital perspectives
260 _c2003
300 _ap.75-95.
520 _aAfter Hong Kong returned to China, it experienced both subtle and significant changes in various arenas including its bureaucratic system, its politics, and in its civil society. These changes gradually lead to regime transformation. This article examines regime transformation in Hong Kong from two theoretical perspectives: politics - administration relations and state-civil society relations. Two cases which constitute salient issues today, the Right of Abode and the Falun Gong cases, were selected to illustrate the direction of Hong Kong regime transformation from both theoretical perspectives. The two cases suggest a possibility that Hong Kong might be gradually coming under more political/party influence from the Beijing government. They also suggest the institutionalization of a more centralized political system in Hong Kong, while it continues to maintain a relatively high level of social capital development with significant civil group activities. - Reproduced.
650 _aPublic administration - Hong Kong
650 _aPublic administration
700 _aGage, Robert W.
773 _aInternational Journal of Public Administration
909 _a56649
999 _c56649
_d56649