Book contents
- Reviews
- Treaty for a Lost City
- Treaty for a Lost City
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Table of Provisions in the Joint Declaration and the Basic Law of the Hong Kong S.A.R.
- Part I 1982–1997
- Part II 1997–2014
- Part III 2014–2021
- Introduction to Part III
- 8 Patriotism, Comprehensive Jurisdiction, Formal Allegiance: 2014–2017
- 9 Fundamental Rights and the 2019 Extradition Bill
- 10 The 2020 National Security Law
- 11 Aftermath
- Book part
- Index
8 - Patriotism, Comprehensive Jurisdiction, Formal Allegiance: 2014–2017
from Part III - 2014–2021
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 July 2022
- Reviews
- Treaty for a Lost City
- Treaty for a Lost City
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Table of Provisions in the Joint Declaration and the Basic Law of the Hong Kong S.A.R.
- Part I 1982–1997
- Part II 1997–2014
- Part III 2014–2021
- Introduction to Part III
- 8 Patriotism, Comprehensive Jurisdiction, Formal Allegiance: 2014–2017
- 9 Fundamental Rights and the 2019 Extradition Bill
- 10 The 2020 National Security Law
- 11 Aftermath
- Book part
- Index
Summary
There was, first of all, the PRC State Council’s 2014 white paper, which is said to have contributed in turn to the 2014 protests, then there was the peculiar ‘missing booksellers’ affair in late 2015, and after that the extension of Mainland Chinese Law, in 2017, to the Kowloon terminus of a newly constructed rail link. In addition, there was the ‘article 22’ issue and it may on reflection be best to begin with that.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Treaty for a Lost CityThe Sino-British Joint Declaration, pp. 177 - 199Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2022