The commissioning of a plan by Patrick Abercrombie for British Hong Kong in 1947 is the entry point to explore claims of ‘benevolent colonialism’. Through an engagement with British colonial attitudes towards the majority Chinese population, we can critically re-evaluate claims that British planning brought a more enlightened form of urbanism. Instead, we find colonial inaction and a marked difference in housing and development standards based largely on racial distinctions between the perceived needs of European and Chinese inhabitants. By situating planning efforts in Hong Kong within the racial hierarchies of empire, we can examine how imperial power bolstered British planning
This paper explores how the utopian vision of the “garden city” was adopted and appropriated by Hong...
Hong Kong was a British colony between 1842 and 1996. In the early periods of the colony’s existence...
Purpose: This paper seeks to argue that racially discriminatory zoning in Colonial Hong Kong could h...
This paper takes the development of the British town planning movement as its starting point to expl...
This paper explores the colonial in postcolonial migration tracing its surfaces in the bodies, trave...
This paper examines the role of children, the family and ideals of white conjugality in the struggle...
Tin Shui Wai new town in Hong Kong, known as the “city of sadness,” has been narrated by the “Tin Sh...
Tin Shui Wai new town in Hong Kong, known as the “city of sadness,” has been narrated by the “Tin Sh...
This thesis argues that an exercise of political will by the government was decisive to the course ...
In the Asian mini-city-states of Hong Kong and Singapore, massive public housing programmes, far mor...
This paper analyses an aspect of Post-war British administration of Hong Kong from geographical pers...
This thesis studies the formation of an indiscernable coloniality through the contextualization of m...
Hong Kong has existed as a British crown colony since 1942, and its colonial political structures re...
As earlier contributions to this roundtable series have underscored, British history enjoys a wide i...
originally published by Harvard University Press in 2005"This book fills an important gap in the sch...
This paper explores how the utopian vision of the “garden city” was adopted and appropriated by Hong...
Hong Kong was a British colony between 1842 and 1996. In the early periods of the colony’s existence...
Purpose: This paper seeks to argue that racially discriminatory zoning in Colonial Hong Kong could h...
This paper takes the development of the British town planning movement as its starting point to expl...
This paper explores the colonial in postcolonial migration tracing its surfaces in the bodies, trave...
This paper examines the role of children, the family and ideals of white conjugality in the struggle...
Tin Shui Wai new town in Hong Kong, known as the “city of sadness,” has been narrated by the “Tin Sh...
Tin Shui Wai new town in Hong Kong, known as the “city of sadness,” has been narrated by the “Tin Sh...
This thesis argues that an exercise of political will by the government was decisive to the course ...
In the Asian mini-city-states of Hong Kong and Singapore, massive public housing programmes, far mor...
This paper analyses an aspect of Post-war British administration of Hong Kong from geographical pers...
This thesis studies the formation of an indiscernable coloniality through the contextualization of m...
Hong Kong has existed as a British crown colony since 1942, and its colonial political structures re...
As earlier contributions to this roundtable series have underscored, British history enjoys a wide i...
originally published by Harvard University Press in 2005"This book fills an important gap in the sch...
This paper explores how the utopian vision of the “garden city” was adopted and appropriated by Hong...
Hong Kong was a British colony between 1842 and 1996. In the early periods of the colony’s existence...
Purpose: This paper seeks to argue that racially discriminatory zoning in Colonial Hong Kong could h...