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        SARS and the Limits of the Hong Kong SAR Administrative State

        Ngok Ma 경남대학교 극동문제연구소 2004 ASIAN PERSPECTIVE Vol.28 No.1

        This article reviews the crisis-management experience of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (SAR) administrative state in handling the SARS outbreak in the spring 2003. The slow and ineffective response of the SAR government was the result of a mixture of factors: lack of crisis mentality, overemphasis on technocratic rationality in decision making, fragmentation of the healthcare institutions, and an inability to mobilize social and health resources. The lack of political leadership also made it difficult for the administrative state to transcend institutional constraints to mete out an effective response in a time of crisis. Many of these problems were rooted in the nature of Hong Kong as an administrative state, which calls for more fundamental reforms on top of administrative reforms in healthcare institutions.

      • KCI등재

        SARS AND THE LIMITS OF THE HONG KONG SAR ADMINISTRATIVE STATE

        Ma, Ngok 경남대학교 극동문제연구소 2004 ASIAN PERSPECTIVE Vol.28 No.1

        This article reviews the crisis-management experience of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (SAR) administrative state in handling the SARS outbreak in the spring 2003. The slow and ineffective response of the SAR government was the result of a mixtrue of factors: lack of crisis mentality, overemphasis in technocratic rationality in decision making, fragmentation of the healthcare institutions, and an inability to mobilize social and health resources. The lack of political leadership also made it difficult for the administrative state to transcend institutional constraints to mete out an effective response in time of crisis. Many of these problems were rooted in the nature of Hong Kong as an administrative state, which calls for more fundamental reforms on top of administrative reforms in health care institutions.

      • KCI등재

        Immigrants as Voters in Electoral Autocracies: The Case of Mainland Chinese Immigrants in Hong Kong

        Stan Hok-Wui Wong,Ngok Ma,Wai-man Lam 동아시아연구원 2018 Journal of East Asian Studies Vol.18 No.1

        Migration to electoral autocracies has become increasingly common. Extant studies, however, accord little attention to the immigrants' influences on the domestic politics of these regimes. We argue that immigrants have attributes (status quo bias and lack of prior exposure to local politics) that make them an attractive co-optation target of the authoritarian regime. We provide a case study of mainland Chinese immigrants in Hong Kong to illustrate our argument. Since the sovereignty transfer, the Hong Kong government has devised various schemes to attract these immigrants, while pro-establishment political parties and groups have actively sought to co-opt them. Using two distinct public opinion surveys, we also find that immigrants are more likely to approve of the political and economic status quo, and less likely to vote for pro-democracy opposition parties than the natives. In addition, we find no evidence that exposure to political information can change the immigrants' vote choice.

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