Hong Kong and Macao in transition (II): Exploring the new political order |
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Authors: | Yash Ghai |
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Affiliation: | 1. Sir Y.K. Pao Professor of Public Law , University of Hong Kong;2. Honorary Professor, University of Warwick;3. Honorary Professor, National Law School of India , Bangalore |
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Abstract: | The first part of the article focused on democratization and the main issues at stake between China, Britain, Portugal, Hong Kong and Macao as the responsibility for the two colonies reverts to the mainland. It was argued that their separate history and their respective metropolitan traditions will weigh heavily on the prospects for any phased transition to democracy. Of more immediate importance, however, is the current balance of forces within the region which affects them both, particularly their relationships with a China undergoing vast social and economic changes with profound implications for their own future political development. In this second part of the article there is more concern with current and future problems affecting the practice of democracy in Hong Kong and Macao, particularly the ways in which the new Basic Laws might operate in practice after 1997. |
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