This article studies how the Hong Kong Court of Final Appeal has come to develop a sophisticated judicial gloss on the provisions of the Basic Law, Hong Kong’s constitutional document, in ways unforeseen by the Chinese National People’s Congress that enacted it. The ascendancy of constitutional common law in Hong Kong after the end of British rule is remarkable when considered in light of the continuing denial of democratic self-rule by China’s authoritarian Party-state. This article argues that the profusion of political transaction costs due to the fragmentation of the ruling elite and state-society discord consequent to the resumption of Chinese sovereignty has created the requisite space for the Court to craft, with impunity, consequent...
In contemporary Hong Kong, China’s first special administrative region, administrative law has becom...
Includes bibliographical references and indexAs Hong Kong enters its third year under Chinese rule, ...
The recently published PRC White Paper and NPC Standing Committee Decisions have put both Hong Kong\...
The scholarly consensus on the political foundations of independent constitutional review – that it ...
Popular constitutionalism rarely arises in authoritarian polities. In the absence of genuine electio...
This Article explores the possible nature of Hong Kong\u27s Constitution after July, 1997, and discu...
This thesis investigates the sustainability of constitutional review practised in the Hong Kong Spec...
In July 1997, the British colony of Hong Kong was returned to the People’s Republic of China (“PRC”)...
This article analyzes the first ten years of constitutional rights cases in Hong Kong’s Court of Fin...
To assess the degree of judicial autonomy under an autonomous framework, there are five criteria con...
Legislative supremacy, parliamentary accountability, and parliamentary privilege are the cornerstone...
This article examines the nature of the legal system in Hong Kong and its process of autocratisation...
This paper examines the evolution of legal strategies that the central government has used in managi...
In 1984 the People's Republic of China (PRC) and the United Kingdom (UK) signed an international agr...
The author argues that by and large, fundamental rights have been upheld in the last decade. The pro...
In contemporary Hong Kong, China’s first special administrative region, administrative law has becom...
Includes bibliographical references and indexAs Hong Kong enters its third year under Chinese rule, ...
The recently published PRC White Paper and NPC Standing Committee Decisions have put both Hong Kong\...
The scholarly consensus on the political foundations of independent constitutional review – that it ...
Popular constitutionalism rarely arises in authoritarian polities. In the absence of genuine electio...
This Article explores the possible nature of Hong Kong\u27s Constitution after July, 1997, and discu...
This thesis investigates the sustainability of constitutional review practised in the Hong Kong Spec...
In July 1997, the British colony of Hong Kong was returned to the People’s Republic of China (“PRC”)...
This article analyzes the first ten years of constitutional rights cases in Hong Kong’s Court of Fin...
To assess the degree of judicial autonomy under an autonomous framework, there are five criteria con...
Legislative supremacy, parliamentary accountability, and parliamentary privilege are the cornerstone...
This article examines the nature of the legal system in Hong Kong and its process of autocratisation...
This paper examines the evolution of legal strategies that the central government has used in managi...
In 1984 the People's Republic of China (PRC) and the United Kingdom (UK) signed an international agr...
The author argues that by and large, fundamental rights have been upheld in the last decade. The pro...
In contemporary Hong Kong, China’s first special administrative region, administrative law has becom...
Includes bibliographical references and indexAs Hong Kong enters its third year under Chinese rule, ...
The recently published PRC White Paper and NPC Standing Committee Decisions have put both Hong Kong\...