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Environment and Sustainability

The Department is also making important contributions to the University theme of Environment and Sustainability in the areas of ‘Smart and Sustainable Cities‘, ‘Climate Change‘, and ‘Population Studies: Migration, Youth Development and Ageing Management’. Below are some indicative examples of work by Faculty members in this area:

Smart and Sustainable Cities

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  • David Huddart is currently working on a project about autobiographical representations of ultra runners, something apparently extreme but increasingly clearly something that also offers a model for many people searching for keys to active healthy living. In the context of Hong Kong, with its increased uptake of usage of country parks, its thriving hiking and trail running scenes, and its juxtaposition of urban and rural contexts, this project will contribute to models that operate in terms of sport as a vehicle for social change.
  • Joanna Mansbridge examines how global cities perform through their technological infrastructure and architectural design. In “Architecture, Infrastructure, and Urban Performance in Hong Kong,” she contextualises these questions in Hong Kong, analysing two theatrical productions that suggest how technologically mediated urban spaces condition subjects and choreograph actions.
  • Hong Kong Studies, co-edited by Eddie Tay, covers all aspects of Hong Kong’s rich arts and humanities cultures both in relation to Chinese culture and Hong Kong’s other cultures. Understanding these cultures and how they are grounded and embedded in the environment is essential to any movement for greater environmental awareness (what, for example, Daoism proposes) and sustainability.

Climate Change

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Population Studies: Migration, Youth Development and Ageing Management

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  • Jette Hansen Edwards has conducted extensive research on youth identity, language, and politics in Hong Kong. Her work in this area has been cited in The Economist. She has also been invited to contribute two articles to the Georgetown Journal of International Affairs, based on her research on language, identity, and politics in Hong Kong and China: “Language, identity, and politics in Hong Kong” and “The rise of English in China: A threat to China’s national unity?”. She has published several articles about youth identity in Hong Kong in relation to language and politics including her recent book, The Politics of English in Hong Kong: Attitudes, Identity, and Use (Routledge, 2018).
  • David Huddart has also written on diasporic identities through their literatures and general cultural formations. As examples, he published a book on the work of Homi Bhabha, a widely-cited humanities scholar, who is particularly associated with the idea of hybridity. Ideas such as hybridity demand that we think carefully about issues of migration and integration, as is clear in terms of human rights discourses, which David Huddart has written on specifically in terms of cultural right.
  • Wilkinson Daniel Wong Gonzales examines different diasporic populations in East Asia, focusing on social factors such as age, identity, and ethnicity. His work has examined an under-documented minority group in the Philippines – the Lannangs, as well as the homeland Mainland group in Manila. He has published some of his findings in an invited book chapter “Interactions of Sinitic Languages in the Philippines: Sinicization, Filipinization, and Sino-Philippine Language Creation”.
  • Li Ou is working on Romantic poetics in terms of Romantic poets’ stances towards home and country, native language, and poetic tradition. Specifically, she explores Keats’s poetics in relation to home and homelessness, dislocation and diaspora, inheritance and translation of poetic traditions and poetics.
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