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“One Country, Two Systems” and Hong Kong-China National Integration: A Crisis-Transformation Perspective

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This paper examines the historical process of Hong Kong-China national unification through a crisis-transformation framework. This paper argues that the Chinese unification process between Hong Kong and mainland China is not a smooth process. Instead, it has gone through at least four crises during the 1980s and the 1990s. The institution framework for unification - the so-called “One Country, Two Systems” policy - emerged out of the first crisis of negotiation in the early 1980s, and this policy has been hotly contested and transformed during the various crises over the past three decades. Previous studies on Hong Kong-China unification tends to focus solely on the political and legal aspects. However, this paper shows that unification needs to be symmetrical on all aspects (legal, political, economic and socio-cultural) in order to make it work.

Keywords: China; Hong Kong; National unification; cross-border linkages; social and economic integration

Document Type: Research Article

Affiliations: Division of Social Science, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, Kowloon, Hong Kong

Publication date: 01 February 2011

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