This book is a collection of research papers on the political and social conditions of Hong Kong sponsored by the Social Research Centre of The Chinese University of Hong Kong. The collection is not a comprehensive coverage of such conditions in Hong Kong. I t is a selective report with the purpose of updating existing information. The new information will provide a better understanding of Hong Kong\u27s problems and serve as a resource in coping with these problems
Tseng and Wu have performed a creditable task in editing this book that involved twenty-nine delegat...
In The People’s Republic of Amnesia, NPR and former BBC correspondent Louisa Lim aims to chart how t...
In the past, a Chinatown was “a self-contained urban enclave” where nearly all Chinese people, their...
This book is a collection of research papers on the political and social conditions of Hong Kong spo...
This book is a recent addition to the Anthropology of Contemporary Issues series edited by Roger San...
Chan reviews the book Advances in social welfare in Hong Kong, edited by Daniel T. L. Shek, Lam Mong...
How do we find calm in dense heaving cities such as Tokyo, London, or New York? In Sanctuaries of th...
Wong Yiu-Chung reviews the book \u27Hong Kong\u27s Embattled Democracy : a Societal Analysis\u27 by ...
Peter Kwong presents a provocative portrait of Chinese-Americans in The New Chinatown. This book des...
This book brings together papers and panel discussions of a conference on Chiang Kai-shek held in Ta...
In the dazzling global metropolis of Shanghai, what has it meant to call the city home? In this acco...
There are two tales behind Paul Siu\u27s The Chinese Laundryman: A Study of Social Isolation. It is ...
A review of Swimming in Hong Kong (2016), a short story collection by Stephanie Han
This is probably the first monographic study to examine in-depth the present criminal subculture of ...
This books examines Taiwan’s dynamism, contradictions, colour, excitement and, above all, vitality. ...
Tseng and Wu have performed a creditable task in editing this book that involved twenty-nine delegat...
In The People’s Republic of Amnesia, NPR and former BBC correspondent Louisa Lim aims to chart how t...
In the past, a Chinatown was “a self-contained urban enclave” where nearly all Chinese people, their...
This book is a collection of research papers on the political and social conditions of Hong Kong spo...
This book is a recent addition to the Anthropology of Contemporary Issues series edited by Roger San...
Chan reviews the book Advances in social welfare in Hong Kong, edited by Daniel T. L. Shek, Lam Mong...
How do we find calm in dense heaving cities such as Tokyo, London, or New York? In Sanctuaries of th...
Wong Yiu-Chung reviews the book \u27Hong Kong\u27s Embattled Democracy : a Societal Analysis\u27 by ...
Peter Kwong presents a provocative portrait of Chinese-Americans in The New Chinatown. This book des...
This book brings together papers and panel discussions of a conference on Chiang Kai-shek held in Ta...
In the dazzling global metropolis of Shanghai, what has it meant to call the city home? In this acco...
There are two tales behind Paul Siu\u27s The Chinese Laundryman: A Study of Social Isolation. It is ...
A review of Swimming in Hong Kong (2016), a short story collection by Stephanie Han
This is probably the first monographic study to examine in-depth the present criminal subculture of ...
This books examines Taiwan’s dynamism, contradictions, colour, excitement and, above all, vitality. ...
Tseng and Wu have performed a creditable task in editing this book that involved twenty-nine delegat...
In The People’s Republic of Amnesia, NPR and former BBC correspondent Louisa Lim aims to chart how t...
In the past, a Chinatown was “a self-contained urban enclave” where nearly all Chinese people, their...