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Legal mobilization under authoritarianism : the case of post-colonial Hong Kong
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ISBN: 1139611178 1107237920 1139613030 1139622331 1283943085 1139626051 1139609351 1139616757 1139424394 9781139626057 9781139424394 9781283943086 9781139616751 9781139613033 9781139613033 9781107031999 1107031990 9781139611176 9781107237926 9781139622332 9781139609357 Year: 2013 Publisher: Cambridge : Cambridge University Press,

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Abstract

Legal mobilization is the process by which individuals invoke their legal rights and use litigation to defend or develop these rights against the government. In recent years, increasing attention has been paid to this phenomenon as it occurs under authoritarian regimes. It is often suggested that, in such situations, legal mobilization is caused by the strategic interests of the ruling elites. Using the case study of post-colonial Hong Kong, where legal mobilization has by no means unfolded as political authorities would wish, Waikeung Tam casts doubt on this contention. To do so, he examines in depth why and how legal mobilization arises under authoritarianism. Tam analyses quantitative data of changes in the Hong Kong judiciary agendas over the last three decades and uses detailed interviews with activists, politicians, cause lawyers, judges and government officials to reveal the complex underlying socio-political forces at play.

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