
Published online:
14 September 2011
Published in print:
01 October 2010
Online ISBN:
9789882207370
Print ISBN:
9789888028832
Contents
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Origins of Hong Kong identity Origins of Hong Kong identity
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Modern identity Modern identity
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Hong Kong identity: 1984 and migration decisions Hong Kong identity: 1984 and migration decisions
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Hong Kongers on the move: Outbound migration Hong Kongers on the move: Outbound migration
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Hong Kongers on the move: Settling in Hong Kongers on the move: Settling in
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Canadian settlement Canadian settlement
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Australian settlement Australian settlement
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United States settlement United States settlement
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New Zealand settlement New Zealand settlement
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Hong Kongers on the move: Coming home Hong Kongers on the move: Coming home
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Counting the remigrants Counting the remigrants
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Returning home: Psychological consequences for identity Returning home: Psychological consequences for identity
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Chapter
1 A short history of two hundred years of Hong Kong migration and identity
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Published:October 2010
Cite
Sussman, Nan M., 'A short history of two hundred years of Hong Kong migration and identity', Return Migration and Identity: A Global Phenomenon, A Hong Kong Case (Hong Kong , 2010; online edn, Hong Kong Scholarship Online, 14 Sept. 2011), https://doi.org/10.5790/hongkong/9789888028832.003.0002, accessed 21 Apr. 2025.
Abstract
This chapter examines the origins of the Hong Kong identity, starting with the indigenous inhabitants from southern China, and continuing through the nineteenth-century imposition of British sovereignty, modern identity, and finally the late twentieth-century handover to China. It notes that residents of Hong Kong have developed complex identities and learned how to negotiate these identities within the Hong Kong regional and global context. The large-scale movement of people from and back to Hong Kong allows us not only to understand the psychological consequences of Hong Kong return migration but also to illuminate an emerging worldwide phenomenon.
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