Description
Political Censorship in British Hong Kong provides a comprehensive legal and historical analysis of censorship practices and restrictions on freedom of expression during the 155 years of British colonial rule. Michael Ng explores how colonial authorities developed and enforced laws to control political speech, publications, and public discourse.
The book examines the evolution of censorship mechanisms from early colonial governance through the Cold War period and into the final decades before the 1997 handover to China. Ng contextualizes these legal frameworks within broader debates about civil liberties, national security, and the colonial state’s authority.
By situating Hong Kong’s censorship laws within the wider context of British colonial legal traditions and international human rights standards, this work illuminates how political expression was negotiated and constrained in one of the twentieth century’s most significant colonial territories.







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