Publication | Closed Access
Cross-Border Migration of Hong Kong Residents Under the ‘One Country, Two Systems’ Policy
10
Citations
50
References
2005
Year
Human MigrationEast Asian StudiesGlobal MigrationEducationInternal MigrationMigration (Business Information Systems)Systems ’ PolicyHong KongHong Kong ResidentsLanguage StudiesMigration PolicyBorder ControlEast Asian LanguagesPopulation MigrationMigrant CityMigration (Educational Migration)Cross-border MigrationGlobalizationMainland ChinaInternational Population MovementCultureTransnational MobilityPopulation MovementImmigration
Hong Kong is known as a migrant city because its population was sourced from mainland China, and because there has always been outflows of people to overseas countries, especially from the mid-1980s to mid-1990s. Emigration to mainland China has become a significant recent trend. This article discusses this phenomenon in the theoretical contexts of migration and trans-border residential development. It contends that the trend will intensify more quickly than other cross-border movements because the two systems are separated by a political border within one country, and because there are common cultural ties and rapid economic integration.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1