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International Journal of Constitutional Law 2007 5(3):419-452; doi:10.1093/icon/mom018
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© The Author 2007. Oxford University Press and New York University School of Law. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org

The elusive aim of universal suffrage: Constitutional developments in Hong Kong

Lorenz Langer*

* Research assistant, Institute of Public International and Foreign Constitutional Law, University of Zurich, Ph.D. candidate. I would like to thank Teresa Kam, Juliane Kokott, Kay Hailbronner, and Lewes Leung for their support. Email: Lorenz.Langer{at}gmx.net


   Abstract

For most of its one hundred and fifty years, British rule over Hong Kong did not allow for any political participation by the local population. Prior to the territory's return to China, however, the United Kingdom and the prospective new sovereign agreed that both the legislature and executive of the future Hong Kong would be determined by elections. China further specified that, as an "ultimate aim," these elections would be based on universal suffrage. Yet in the years since, China has intervened in the supposedly autonomous region to slow down or halt constitutional development. While these interventions contravene the constitutional provisions of the Special Administrative Region, they should not come as a surprise; nor do they represent a change in Chinese attitudes toward Hong Kong. Rather, they reflect the Chinese government's misgivings about free elections—misgivings not unlike those of the British with respect to colonial Hong Kong.


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