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      Negotiating the Space of Civil Autonomy in Hong Kong: Power, Discourses and Dramaturgical Representations

      The China Quarterly
      Cambridge University Press (CUP)

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          Abstract

          This article delineates the negotiated space of civil autonomy in post-handover Hong Kong through the contingent interplay of law, discourse, dramaturgy and politics. It takes the Public Order Ordinance dispute in 2000 as the first major test case of civil conflicts in the shadow of the right of abode struggle. As it unfolded, the event demonstrated both the power and limits of resistance by the people, and the government's increasing will, as well as the strategies it used, to rule within the “law and order” framework under continual challenges. In the event, civil autonomy had been a contested issue involving considerations of rule of law, rights, civic propriety, state legitimacy and the construction of particular identity (such as student-hood). Given the multiplicity of discourses and sub-discourses, citizenship practices and public criticisms opened up a contested space for resistance and negotiation. A campaign of civil disobedience was at first successfully mounted through an ensemble of political and symbolic mechanisms. A turning point was configured when, mediated by a meaning reconstruction process, the government made a series of political and performative acts to re-script the drama, which turned out to be an ironic success for itself that put state–society relations on an increasingly tenuous course. Ultimately ideological differences were at stake: respect for a rights-based discourse of rule of law versus the assertion of political and legal authoritarianism.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          The China Quarterly
          The China Quarterly
          Cambridge University Press (CUP)
          0305-7410
          1468-2648
          September 2004
          September 28 2004
          September 2004
          : 179
          : 647-664
          Article
          10.1017/S0305741004000529
          679e163f-afdf-4856-aa59-3846bf1523d4
          © 2004

          https://www.cambridge.org/core/terms

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