Christopher Munn - Böcker
Visar alla böcker från författaren Christopher Munn. Handla med fri frakt och snabb leverans.
6 produkter
6 produkter
2 219 kr
Skickas inom 10-15 vardagar
A study of the first three decades of British rule in Hong Kong, focusing on the troubled and controversial process of establishing a British colony at Hong Kong and on the reception of British rule by people in the region.
416 kr
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Anglo-China traces the development of colonial rule in early British Hong Kong. Drawing on a variety of hitherto neglected sources, the book also explores how the daily practice of government affected the lives of people in the region - and how they in turn sought to shape colonial rule.
930 kr
Skickas inom 5-8 vardagar
The Dictionary of Hong Kong Biography contains biographies of over 500 people who are no longer alive and who have played an important, representative or interesting part in Hong Kong history. Its specially commissioned entries encompass people from government, business, religion, sport, the army and navy, the arts and entertainment.
494 kr
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Meeting Place presents detailed studies of day-to-day interactions among people of different cultures in a variety of settings. By showing that there was sustained among men and women of different cultures, it complicates traditional historical understandings of Hong Kong as a city either of rigid segregation or of pervasive integration.
Special Standing in the World
A History of the Faculty of Law at The University of Hong Kong
Inbunden, Engelska, 2019
321 kr
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493 kr
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We must have a procedure if we are going to hang anyone that is just,' said Chief Justice Sir Francis Piggott in 1909, on discovering that Chinese persons accused of murder were being denied interpretation in Hong Kong s courts. Due process, no matter how costly or inconvenient, was one of the penalties of empire,' he declared.Penalties of Empire explores how judges, juries and lawyers strove to deliver justice during the 150 years when the death penalty was in force in Hong Kong. Nine main chapters focus on key capital trials in the first century of British rule. Among the cases are piracies, assassinations, crimes of passion, and murders committed from desperation. These chapters describe the proceedings and participants in court. They also examine the public debates surrounding each case and the exercise of mercy by governors. Two final chapters discuss the decline of the death penalty after World War II, its suspension after 1966, and the controversies leading to its formal abolition in 1993. Penalties of Empire traces the evolution of criminal justice at its highest levels. It also offers a prism for understanding some of the broader forces at work in Hong Kong s history.