6,968 results
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352. The Influence of Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macao Bridge on the Development of Urban Agglomeration in the Pearl River Delta.
- Author
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Zhang, Wenjing
- Subjects
URBAN growth ,ARTIFICIAL islands ,PANEL analysis ,ECONOMIC status ,REGRESSION analysis - Abstract
Known as one of the "seven wonders of the modern world", the Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macao Bridge connects Hong Kong, Zhuhai, and Macao. The bridge, which lasted 14 years from design to construction, spans the Lingdingyang waters of the South China Sea to the west, connects Macao and Zhuhai artificial islands, and ends at Zhuhai Hongwan. The bridge, which shortens the traffic distance between the three places and allows the economy, culture, and technology of the three places to communicate with each other, opened up a new world. This paper intends to review the process of the construction of the Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macao Bridge and sort out the expected benefits of the bridge's opening to traffic. Then, the paper explains the new situation faced by the Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macao Bridge. Based on the outward service function model of city flow and the interaction strength model, we conduct an empirical study on the economic status of the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area. This paper analyzes the interaction between the cities which are in the Greater Bay Area and uses panel data to conduct regression analysis to verify the important impact of the Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macao Bridge on the development of cities in the Pearl River Delta. Finally, conclusions are drawn: Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macao Bridge is undoubtedly of positive significance to strengthen economic and social ties between the West Bank of the Pearl River and Hong Kong, and Hong Kong has a large economic radiation capacity to the cities that are in the Pearl River Delta and Macao in the construction, finance, transportation, warehousing, and communications industries. And corresponding suggestions are put forward. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
353. Global Trends in Research of Gouty Arthritis Over Past Decade: A Bibliometric Analysis.
- Author
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Deng, Pin, Wang, Shulong, Sun, Xiaojie, Qi, Yinze, Ma, Zhanhua, Pan, Xuyue, Liang, Huan, Wu, Junde, and Chen, Zhaojun
- Subjects
ARTHRITIS ,BIBLIOMETRICS ,CHINESE medicine ,CITATION indexes - Abstract
Gouty arthritis (GA), as a multifactorial disease, is characterised by intense pain, active inflammation symptoms, and swollen joints. It has utterly complex pathogenesis, of which the amount of research publications on GA has increased during the last few decades. A bibliometric analysis was carried out to investigate the trends, frontiers, and hot spots in global scientific output in GA research over the last decade. We retrieved the Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-Expanded) of the Web of Science Core Collection (WoSCC) for publications and recorded information published from 2012 to 2021. we carried out the bibliometric analysis and visualisation analysis of the overall distribution of annual outputs, leading countries, active institutions, journals, authors, co-cited references, and keywords with the VOSviewer and CiteSpace. The impact and quality of papers were assessed using a global citation score (GCS). We retrieved 2052 articles and reviews in total. The annual number of publications (Np) related to GA research has increased during the latest decade. China published the most papers, and the USA achieved the highest H-index and number of citations (Nc). The League of European Research Universities (LERU) and Clinical Rheumatology (Clin Rheumatol) are the most productive institutions and periodicals. The total GCS of the paper written by Kottgen, A. in 2013 was 479, ranking the first. The most common keywords were "Gout," "hyperuricemia," and "gouty arthritis." This research revealed that though there was a slight fluctuation in publications related to GA, the Np raised on the whole. China was an enormous creator, and the USA was an influential nation in this domain. The top three contributor authors were Dalbeth, N., Singh, JA., and Choi, HK. There were few investigations on the treatment of GA by Chinese medicine monomer, and the "mechanism," "pathway", "nf- kappa-b", "injury", "receptor", and "animal model" were growing research hotspots. Our research illustrated the hotspots of research and development trends in the research field of GA during the last decade. Recognition of the most critical indicators (researchers, countries, institutes, and journals for the release of GA research), hotspots in the research field of GA can be helpful for countries, scholars, and policymakers in this field to understand GA better make decisions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
354. School-Based Mental Health Initiative: Potentials and Challenges for Child and Adolescent Mental Health.
- Author
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Lai, Kelly Y. C., Se-Fong Hung, Lee, Hannah W. S., and Leung, Patrick W. L.
- Subjects
CHILD mental health services ,SCHOOL mental health services ,SECURITY (Psychology) ,MENTAL health ,ADOLESCENT health ,TEACHER-student relationships ,MENTAL health of students - Abstract
School-based mental health support services allow children and adolescents easy access to services without requirement of traveling to clinics and hospitals. We describe a School Mental Health Support Scheme (SMHSS) piloted in Hong Kong and discuss the challenges and learnings from the experience. This conceptual paper argues that accessibility is not the only advantage of such services. Teachers are significant others in child development, alongside with families. They play a central role in impacting the children's/adolescents' needs for competence and adult attachment, while schools provide an expanded social network of peers for one's social relationship. The fulfillment of these needs has powerful implications in themental health of the children/adolescents. Teachers can help students to develop a sense of competence with self-worth and self-identity via providing guidance and feedback, whether they be on one's strengths or weaknesses, with acceptance, tolerance and unconditional positive regard. Particularly, the latter define a form of teacher-student relationship or adult attachment that offers the children/adolescents emotional security and nourishment, protecting them from failings and adversities. Teachers can also supervise and guide their students' social development with peers at schools. A recent meta-analysis has found preliminary evidence that those school-based mental health services integrated into the teachers' routine teaching activities aremore effective. Teachers, who are overworked and stressed by the schools' overemphasis on academics and grades, have yet to fully grasp their unique roles in supporting students with mental health needs. This paper ends by advocating a paradigm shift in which both the healthcare professionals and educators should forge a mutually beneficial collaboration in jointly enhancing the mental health of children/adolescents at schools. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
355. Performances of care: Questioning relationship‐building and international student recruitment.
- Subjects
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STUDENT recruitment , *FOREIGN students , *STUDENT unions , *UNIVERSITIES & colleges , *HIGHER education - Abstract
This paper analyses how performances of care are a critical feature within the international student recruitment process through an investigation of three distinctive geographical encounters: caring for students; supporting third‐party recruiters; and acting collegially. Caring and the recognition of students as emotional beings is often cited as overlooked within internationalisation agendas brought about by the neoliberalised higher education system. This paper shows how performances of caring are mobilised as part of this as an attempt to secure international student enrolments. International students are a critical income stream in the university sector and, within the UK, higher education is a major export industry. However, growing competition from new markets, limited longer‐term migration prospects, and evidence that international students are primarily viewed as cash cows, means that it is ever more difficult to recruit these students. This paper uses qualitative interviews with international office staff based at 10 UK higher education institutions together with observational research at recruitment events in Hong Kong in 2017 to offer critical and as yet unresearched insights into this aspect of the student recruitment process. It questions the validity of these caring practices and whether the university can ever be a "caring" entity if wider policy agendas are focused on the marketised and the neoliberal. This paper uses three encounters to show how performances of caring are mobilised as an attempt to secure international student enrolments within the neoliberal university. It uses information from a series of interviews with international student recruitment recruitment staff and observational research to offer critical and as yet unresearched insights into this aspect of the student recruitment process. The paper questions whether the university can truly be a 'caring' entity if wider policy agendas are focused on the neoliberalisation of the higher education system. This paper uses three encounters to show how performances of caring are mobilised as an attempt to secure international student enrolments within the neoliberal university. It uses information from a series of interviews with international student recruitment staff and observational research to offer critical and as yet unresearched insights into this aspect of the student recruitment process. The paper questions whether the university can truly be a "caring" entity if wider policy agendas are focused on the neoliberalisation of the higher education system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
356. Gendering immigration: media framings of the economic and cultural consequences of immigration.
- Author
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Liu, Shan-Jan Sarah
- Subjects
- *
EMIGRATION & immigration , *ECONOMIC impact , *GENDER stereotypes , *FEMINIST theory , *GENDER , *FRAMES (Social sciences) - Abstract
The media are found to be racialized in framing immigration. Yet, little is known about how the media across regions are gendered in their framings of immigration as economic and cultural issues. Drawing from a representative sample of newspapers in Hong Kong, Taiwan, the U.K., and the U.S., this paper conducts a framing analysis of over 1,700 news articles to examine the media's gendering of the economic and cultural consequences of immigration. This paper shows that the media identify migrant men at a higher rate than women when framing immigration as an economic issue and that the media identify migrant women at a higher rate when framing immigration as a cultural issue. However, the findings also suggest that the media do so subtly—the gender of immigrants is rarely revealed but implicitly suggested via stereotypes and cues. This paper provides empirical evidence supporting feminist theory and fills a gap in current literature by adding the intersectional dimensions taking gender and migrant status into account. It offers insight into how the media discursively construct migrant men and women are to illustrate the gendered division of their impact on the economy and culture. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
357. The abortive revolution: The South China Film Company in early Cold War Hong Kong (1949–1952).
- Author
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Chen, Mian
- Subjects
MOTION picture studios ,COLD War, 1945-1991 ,REVOLUTIONS ,OVERSEAS Chinese ,WAGE increases - Abstract
Although existing scholarship is paying increasing attention to leftist cinema in Cold War Hong Kong, few works fully examine the Chinese Communist Party's (CCP's) revolutionary filmmaking practices during the early Cold War. Centering on the short-lived leftist studio South China Film Company (1949–1952), this paper argues that the studio's development epitomized the CCP's efforts to transform cinematic representation for multiple revolutionary purposes and strengthen the Party's mobilization of filmmaking communities, which were eventually crushed by escalating conflicts between colonial authorities and the CCP. The films produced by South China Film Company exemplified the CCP's ambitions to appeal to a Cantonese-speaking local audience and later, to carry out more radical ideological campaigns, influence overseas Chinese in Southeast Asia, and conduct thought reform of intellectuals. Film production was accompanied by mobilization of leftist filmmakers. The ideological message and mobilization led to a crackdown by colonial authorities and further drove the CCP to adopt a more implicit approach to launching ideological campaigns. This paper revises the history of South China Film Company and unsettles the existing historiography of Hong Kong leftist cinema that centers mainly on moderation and balance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
358. Learning Analytics for Programme Review: Evidence, Analysis, and Action to Improve Student Learning Outcomes.
- Author
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Armatas, Christine, Kwong, Theresa, Chun, Cecilia, Spratt, Christine, Chan, Dick, and Kwan, Joanna
- Subjects
EDUCATIONAL outcomes ,SOFTWARE development tools ,HIGHER education research ,CURRICULUM evaluation ,LEARNING ,NETWORK governance - Abstract
The application of learning analytics (LA) to research and practice in higher education is expanding. Researchers and practitioners are using LA to provide an evidentiary basis across higher education to investigate student learning, to drive institutional quality improvement strategies, to determine at-risk behaviours and develop intervention strategies, to measure attrition more effectively and to improve curriculum design and evaluation in both on-campus and e-learning settings. This paper is a case study report of the novel application of LA to programme curriculum review from a major cross-institutional project in Hong Kong. The paper describes the rationale for the project, the conceptual model that led the approach and the development of a software tool that allowed the automation of statistical analyses specifically relevant to programme review. In addition, the paper addresses a major challenge that the project faced in relation to data governance. The paper concludes by proposing the potential benefits of LA for programme curriculum review. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
359. Cross‐listing on the Hong Kong Exchange and Chinese firm innovation: New evidence.
- Author
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Ma, Rufei, He, Xu, and Xiang, Xin
- Subjects
INNOVATIONS in business ,INFORMATION asymmetry ,MARKET share - Abstract
It has been well documented that cross‐listing can improve firms' governance quality and reduce equity financing costs, which are crucial for firms' innovation activities. In this paper, we investigate the effect of cross‐listing on the Hong Kong (HK) market on the innovation performance of Chinese mainland firms. We find that both innovation outputs and qualities increase significantly when Chinese mainland firms list their shares on the HK market. Concerning the channels through which cross‐listing encourages innovation, we demonstrate that cross‐listed firms can raise low‐cost funds in the HK market, which facilitates their innovation activities. Moreover, the HK market generates more informative stock prices, which mitigate innovation information asymmetry and also encourage firms' innovation. In general, our paper sheds light on a new factor (cross‐listing) that motivates firms to engage in innovation and highlights cross‐listing's function in improving innovation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
360. Analysis of Stock Market Opening and Environment Protecting Information with Computational Technologies: Evidence from China.
- Author
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Zhang, Juan and Liu, Ting
- Subjects
STOCK exchanges ,ENVIRONMENTAL protection ,CAPITAL market ,ENVIRONMENTAL reporting ,INSTITUTIONAL investors ,TECHNOLOGY transfer - Abstract
Stock market plays a leading and crucial role in the market mechanism, which connects the savers and investors. So far, there is no uniform regulation on the disclosure requirement of environmental protection information in China. But companies are increasingly concerned about environmental protection and are committed to disclosing more information about environmental protection. It is important to analyze the information on stock market opening and environmental protection by computing technology. For the stock market, as voluntary disclosure of non-financial information, environmental protection information is an important supplement to financial information and is essential for the investors to make decisions. And it is the important content of capital market information. This article through the capital market opening opportunity: Shanghai (Shenzhen) Hong Kong stock connect (the stock market opening mentioned later in this paper all refers to the Shanghai (Shenzhen) Hong Kong stock connect), empirically investigates the stock market opening that affects the environmental protection information disclosure of the company. Our conclusion supports the views that the stock market opening improved the environmental protection information disclosure of the company and promotes the environmental protection behavior of enterprises. Through further analysis, this paper finds that after the officially carried out the stock market opening policy, the attention of many analysts and the participation of foreign institutional investors urge the management to take the initiative to reduce agency costs, which is an important influence mechanism for the stock market opening to affect the disclosure of enterprises' environmental protection information. The evidence of this study indicates that the stock market opening has an important impact on enterprises in China from the following aspects: improving the information disclosure of environmental protection, thus enhancing the company's awareness of environment protecting, and improving the information quality of stock market in China. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
361. GNSS-RTK Adaptively Integrated with LiDAR/IMU Odometry for Continuously Global Positioning in Urban Canyons.
- Author
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Zhang, Jiachen, Wen, Weisong, Huang, Feng, Wang, Yongliang, Chen, Xiaodong, and Hsu, Li-Ta
- Subjects
GLOBAL Positioning System ,ANGLES ,CANYONS ,LIDAR ,POINT cloud - Abstract
Global Navigation Satellite System Real-time Kinematic (GNSS-RTK) is an indispensable source for the absolute positioning of autonomous systems. Unfortunately, the performance of the GNSS-RTK is significantly degraded in urban canyons, due to the notorious multipath and Non-Line-of-Sight (NLOS). On the contrary, LiDAR/inertial odometry (LIO) can provide locally accurate pose estimation in structured urban scenarios but is subjected to drift over time. Considering their complementarities, GNSS-RTK, adaptively integrated with LIO was proposed in this paper, aiming to realize continuous and accurate global positioning for autonomous systems in urban scenarios. As one of the main contributions, this paper proposes to identify the quality of the GNSS-RTK solution based on the point cloud map incrementally generated by LIO. A smaller mean elevation angle mask of the surrounding point cloud indicates a relatively open area thus the correspondent GNSS-RTK would be reliable. Global factor graph optimization is performed to fuse reliable GNSS-RTK and LIO. Evaluations are performed on datasets collected in typical urban canyons of Hong Kong. With the help of the proposed GNSS-RTK selection strategy, the performance of the GNSS-RTK/LIO integration was significantly improved with the absolute translation error reduced by more than 50%, compared with the conventional integration method where all the GNSS-RTK solutions are used. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
362. Sinophobia in Hong Kong News Media.
- Author
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Lin, Cong and Jackson, Liz
- Subjects
- *
PREJUDICES , *RACISM , *PRESS - Abstract
Sinophobia (anti-Chinese sentiment) has become normalised and increasingly acceptable in Hong Kong in recent decades. Such Sinophobia intersects with aims of protecting what is local in the society, as seen in Hong Kong news media. This paper first explores the concept of Sinophobia. It then provides a background on Sinophobia in Hong Kong, explaining the tensions between the identities of Hong Kong/HongKongers and Mainland China/Mainland Chinese. After elaborating on the role of media and the nature of local media in Hong Kong, this paper examines Sinophobic, stereotypical and quasi-racist discourse in three major Hong Kong news sources. While respecting Hong Kong heritage is a valuable goal, the Sinophobia accompanying some such aims can be seen to fuel hatred among people. In this context, encouraging a more inclusive and reflective discourse is warranted to work against the pitfalls of Sinophobia as a particular form of xenophobia in Hong Kong. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
363. Understanding the smart city race between Hong Kong and Singapore.
- Author
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Ang-Tan, Ruth and Ang, Siyuan
- Subjects
SMART cities ,URBAN growth ,PUBLIC sector - Abstract
Public sector innovation is crucial for smart city development. This paper compares progress in Singapore and Hong Kong (HK). Although similarly competitive in many areas, SG is ahead of HK in rankings. Why does this disparity exist? What forms of public sector innovation are crucial for smart city development? This paper answers these questions for policy-makers by examining the role of public sector innovation in driving smart city developments, and underscores the importance of research and development within the public sector. ABSTRACT Since the 2000s, Hong Kong (HK) and Singapore (SG) have been working to reinvent themselves as smart cities. Despite their similarities, SG has consistently ranked ahead of HK on several smart city indices. To explain this gap, the smart city initiatives of both cities were categorized using a six-factor typology of public sector innovation. Further analysis indicated that SG was ahead of HK because its government has been more aggressive in funding and fostering innovation. This paper suggests that a government's financial support for public sector innovation, as well as its ability to redirect resources within the public sector and get citizens involved, will catalyse transformational efforts into a smart city. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
364. Doxxing as discursive action in a social movement.
- Author
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Lee, Carmen
- Subjects
SOCIAL movements ,SOCIAL action ,CRITICAL discourse analysis ,INTERNET forums ,SELF-disclosure - Abstract
Doxxing is a form of online abuse where doxxers deliberately seek and publish their targets' personal information without consent, often with malicious intent such as ruining their reputation. Despite its prevalence, doxxing has received little scholarly attention compared to other forms of online aggression, and almost no study has approached doxxing from a language and discourse perspective. This exploratory study analyzes 464 online forum posts and comments related to doxxing during the on-going pro-democracy movement in Hong Kong, addressing the overarching question: In what ways is doxxing a discursive action? More specifically, how is doxxing realized intertextually?What are the discourse strategies that forum participants employ to legitimize doxxing? Informed by Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA), the analysis begins by illustrating doxxing as an intertextual and recontextualized social practice, focusing on a forum thread that discloses a police officer's personal information. The core part of the paper discusses four key legitimation strategies of doxxing identified in the data, (i) rationalization, (ii) (re)definition, (iii) construction of negative-Other, and (iv) victimizing 'Us'. The paper concludes by considering the role of doxxing in the Hong Kong social movement, and outlining some directions for future research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
365. Multimodality in Hong Kong government posters from the 1950s–1980s: an appraisal analysis and the discursive construction of legitimation.
- Author
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Wong, May L-Y
- Subjects
CRITICAL discourse analysis ,POSTERS ,CIVIL service positions ,SOCIAL action ,MEDICAL communication - Abstract
This paper uses van Leeuwen's (2008. Discourse and practice: New tools from critical discourse analysis. Oxford: Oxford University Press) Authority Legitimation framework to examine government posters published in the 1950s–1980s in Hong Kong, which serve as a means of shaping public opinion and legitimate social action. Martin and White's (2005. The language of evaluation: Appraisal in english. London: Palgrave Macmillan) Appraisal framework is also applied to provide the study with relevant analytical tools by which to construct evaluatively coherent authorial reading positions propagated by the government in the posters as well as aligning viewers with these desired positions. The government posters being studied are concerned with various aspects of social practices in the domain of public health communication. This paper argues that the representations of these social practices are realized as texts – both visual and verbal – in the posters, as part of a broader recontextualization process where legitimate ways of doing things as stipulated in the government guidelines are recontextualized in these posters and conveyed to members of the public. The aim is two-fold: (1) to provide a systematic analysis of how visual and verbal resources construe evaluation in the government posters and the consequent legitimation discourse as viewers are being persuaded to align with legitimate social practices; (2) to highlight various forms of legitimation, namely, role model authority legitimation, impersonal authority legitimation, and conformity authority legitimation, that are realized in these posters through visual-verbal articulation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
366. Preliminary Findings of the Needs Perceived and Expectations of Users of an Independent Learning Centre Survey in Hong Kong: What do They Tell Us?
- Author
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Chao, Felix, Loong, Yvonne, Siu, Ocean, Wong, Sharon, and Chan, Parker
- Subjects
HIGHER education ,NONFORMAL education ,AWARENESS ,LANGUAGE & languages - Abstract
The Independent Learning Centre (ILC) has a long history in the Chinese University of Hong Kong (CUHK). Being unique in many ways, both within the university and in Hong Kong as an independent support unit on campus, we support all students, namely undergrads and postgrads, in their academic pursuit, career preparation, as well as whole-person and global awareness development through non-formal education. In other words, the ILC does not touch students' grade point average (GPA) directly, but has an undeniable and direct impact on CUHK students' learning experiences and well-being by complementing their formal education and supporting their language and communication skills both in English and Chinese in the context of Hong Kong. We offer both academic and work-related workshops (2 hours long), conduct individual and group consultations, and we develop online learning resources on our own or in collaboration with colleagues from other units such as the University Library, and the Office of Student Affairs to address students' diverse learning needs. Evaluation of our services and resources is conducted after every student encounter face-to-face, and through the online means. In general, students are very satisfied with what we have been offering, and think our Centre is an important piece of puzzle in their learning jigsaw. But despite this, no formal survey on students' views about independent learning has been conducted since our inception. The ILC, therefore, conducted our very first survey in 2022 among all students in the CUHK on their perception of the learning needs, and their expectations of independent learning support that the university should provide in face of the challenges, both local and global, ahead of them. Our paper will present both our quantitative and qualitative survey results, students' comments, as well as the implications for a centre like ours, and other similar centres in the region and across the world. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
367. London beats Asian exchanges to India's $330m Bilt Paper listing on market depth.
- Subjects
- HONG Kong (China), CHINA, SINGAPORE, LONDON Stock Exchange, BILT Paper (Company)
- Abstract
The article reports that the London Stock Exchange is likely to gain its first paper company after Bilt Paper of India chose the exchange over Hong Kong and Singapore for its initial public offering (IPO) worth more than 330 million U.S. dollars. Bilt Paper aims to gain access to sector specialists in Europe and emerging market investors in Great Britain. The company is owned by listed Indian group Ballarpur Industries and private equity investors Lathe Investment.
- Published
- 2011
368. Sunshine Paper Commences Global Public Offering.
- Subjects
STOCK exchanges ,CORPORATE profits ,FINANCIAL markets - Abstract
The article reports that China Sunshine Paper Holdings Co. Ltd. has been listed on the Main Board of The Stock Exchange of Hong Kong Ltd. in Hong Kong, China on November 29, 2007. According to the report, the global offering of Sunshine Paper comprises 100 million shares, wherein 90 million shares will initially be offered to professional, institutional and other investors through international placing, while the remaining 10 million shares will initially be offered to the public.
- Published
- 2007
369. FinTech Association of Hong Kong Launches Best Practice Paper on ICOs.
- Author
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CFO Innovation Asia Staff
- Subjects
TOKENS ,COIN sales & prices ,BUSINESSPEOPLE ,SECURITIES commissions - Published
- 2017
370. Learning spectral-indices-fused deep models for time-series land use and land cover mapping in cloud-prone areas: The case of Pearl River Delta.
- Author
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Li, Zhiwei, Weng, Qihao, Zhou, Yuhan, Dou, Peng, and Ding, Xiaoli
- Subjects
- *
LAND use mapping , *DEEP learning , *LAND use , *LAND cover , *TIME series analysis - Abstract
Mapping of highly dynamic changes in land use and land cover (LULC) can be hindered by various cloudy conditions with optical satellite images. These conditions result in discontinuities in high-temporal-density LULC mapping. In this paper, we developed an integrated time series mapping method to enhance the LULC mapping accuracy and frequency in cloud-prone areas by incorporating spectral-indices-fused deep models and time series reconstruction techniques. The proposed method first reconstructed cloud-contaminated pixels through time series filtering, during which the cloud masks initialized by a deep model were refined and updated during the reconstruction process. Then, the reconstructed time series images were fed into a spectral-indices-fused deep model trained on samples collected worldwide for classification. Finally, post-classification processing, including spatio-temporal majority filtering and time series refinement considering land–water interactions, was conducted to enhance the LULC mapping accuracy and consistency. We applied the proposed method to the cloud- and rain-prone Pearl River Delta (i.e., Guangdong–Hong Kong–Macao Greater Bay Area, GBA) and used time series Sentinel-2 images as the experimental data. The proposed method enabled seamless LULC mapping at a temporal frequency of 2–5 days, and the production of 10 m resolution annual LULC products in the GBA. The assessment yielded a mean overall accuracy of 87.01% for annual mapping in the four consecutive years of 2019–2022 and outperformed existing mainstream LULC products, including ESA WorldCover (83.98%), Esri Land Cover (85.26%), and Google Dynamic World (85.06%). Our assessment also reveals significant variations in LULC mapping accuracies with different cloud masks, thus underscoring their critical role in time series LULC mapping. The proposed method has the potential to generate seamless and near real-time maps for other regions in the world by using deep models trained on datasets collected globally. This method can provide high-quality LULC data sets at different time intervals for various land and water dynamics in cloud- and rain-prone regions. Notwithstanding the difficulties of obtaining high-quality LULC maps in cloud-prone areas, this paper provides a novel approach for the mapping of LULC dynamics and the provision of reliable annual LULC products. • Novel LULC mapping via indices-fused deep models and time series reconstruction. • High-temporal-density 10 m seamless LULC mapping in cloudy and rainy areas (PRD). • Overall mapping accuracy yielded up to 87.01%, outperforming existing LULC products. • Potential to generate seamless near real-time maps and high-quality LULC data sets. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
371. 'GenUrban: Shaping cities for all genders'- Right to the city planning framework, Hong Kong.
- Author
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Mostofa, Rifat Ara, Bonotulshi, Doito, and Guaralda, Mirko
- Subjects
- *
CITIES & towns , *PUBLIC spaces , *URBAN planning , *LITERATURE reviews , *GENDER , *CULTURAL landscapes - Abstract
Urban morphology and spatial forms shape a city's character and user behavior, often embracing a particular type of people and unwelcoming other kinds of gender. City design policies and legislation have favored men since its beginning, affecting overall urban planning and design. While the world is delving into new techniques and methods to empower women, constraints in public space activities remain prevalent. This paper explores the scope of urban design strategies to catalyze women's social and physical inclusion in these spaces. It presents a systematic approach to identifying women's social roles during the use of public spaces and introduces the 'GenUrban: Shaping Cities for All Genders' framework to guide researchers and designers alike promote inclusive urban design and planning. The investigation, in the central area of Hong Kong, focuses on the cultural landscape created by the women-centric 'Foreign Domestic Helpers' community. A desktop literature review, direct observation of public spaces, and in-depth interviews with a focus group of women in the city's heart established and mapped the marginalized users' collective viewpoint and their appropriation of space. The framework can be used by professionals to transform urban spaces through a gender lens to improve the overall quality of public spaces and make them more inclusive and accessible. The paper generates gender-sensitive urban design principles that can be translated for planners to use for various user groups and contexts. When women become key drivers in activating public space, they are given back their right to the city. • Women's traveling patterns are frequent due to their caregiving responsibilities. • The unique cultural landscape of a city creates gender-centered activities. • Integrating gender-specific features ensures urban spaces cater to women's needs. • Reliable public transport is vital for women's mobility and engagement in city life. • A city catering to women tends to accommodate those they care for. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
372. An Intelligent Analysis System for Traditional Arts and Crafts Based on Digital technology: Taking the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area as the Observation Center.
- Author
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Wen, Tingting and Fan, Sijie
- Subjects
- *
DIGITAL technology , *IMAGE registration , *INTELLIGENT buildings - Abstract
In order to improve the analysis effect of traditional arts and crafts, this paper analyzes traditional arts and crafts combined with digital technology, builds an intelligent analysis system to improve the digital processing effect of traditional arts and crafts, and takes the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area as an example to verify the system effect. In order to improve the accuracy of subsequent image alignment and defect detection, this paper compares the effects of the pixel-level edge detection algorithm and the subpixel-level edge detection algorithm and finally selects the subpixel-based edge detection algorithm to extract the edge of the image. In addition, this paper compares the traditional defect detection algorithm through research and experiment and proposes an improved image phase difference method according to the actual situation. The experimental research shows that the traditional arts and crafts intelligent analysis system based on digital technology proposed in this paper has a very good effect. At the same time, with the support of this system, the intelligent analysis of traditional arts and crafts in the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area can be carried out efficiently. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
373. Does renaming improve public attitudes toward vocational education and training in higher education? Evidence from a survey experiment.
- Author
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Lee, Siu-Yau, Lee, John Chi-Kin, and Lam, Bess Yin-Hung
- Subjects
- *
PUBLIC opinion , *HIGHER education , *PROFESSIONAL education , *SOCIAL status - Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to offer direct tests of the effectiveness of renaming vocational education and training (VET) in enhancing the image and popularity of the subject. Although many proponents of renaming argue that the word "vocational" is associated with lower levels of skills and knowledge and should therefore be supplemented by better recognised words, empirical evidence regarding the effectiveness of this strategy is scant. Design/methodology/approach: This study exploits a rare policy change in Hong Kong, where VET was renamed as vocational and professional education and training (VPET) and conducted an original survey experiment of 1,004 parents in the city to test if the new name would improve respondents' perceptions of the subject. Findings: The findings reveal a complex picture regarding the effects of renaming. Although renaming does not seem to improve the overall popularity of vocational education, it may widen the support base for vocational education by diluting its class character. Specifically, while attitudes toward VET are significantly and negatively correlated with family income, no such association is found in regard to VPET. Originality/value: This paper offers the first direct and comprehensive test of the effectiveness of renaming vocational education – a popular policy suggestion in many countries. Its findings complicate conventional expectations and contribute to the study of educational preferences in advanced economies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
374. Mortality trends and projections in Hong Kong.
- Author
-
Wang, Jianping
- Subjects
- *
MORTALITY , *LIFE expectancy - Abstract
Hong Kong has experienced a steady decline in mortality during the past several decades, and Hong Kong now life expectancy are among the highest in the world. Given the very low mortality already achieved, is there much more room for further improvement in Hong Kong's mortality decline? This paper examined how age-specific mortality by sex in Hong Kong has changed over time, and applied the Lee–Carter model to mortality projections in Hong Kong for next 50 years. When using Lee–Carter model, we dealt with the possible divergence in mortality projection for males and females over time, and take a shorter projection base period to meet the assumption of the parameters describing the age pattern of mortality decline being invariant. If we compare the results with the most recent official forecasts, projections on mortality decline in this paper are more optimistic than the official forecasts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
375. The impact of capital flows from Hong Kong on stock market returns in mainland China.
- Author
-
Cheng, William, Zheng, Jinyi, and Krishnamoorthy, Anand
- Subjects
- *
RATE of return on stocks , *CAPITAL movements , *BEAR markets , *STOCK exchanges , *FOREIGN investments , *MARKET sentiment , *ECONOMIC trends - Abstract
The People's Republic of China has increasingly become an attractive location for foreign capital. The flow of foreign capital into mainland China includes the so-called northbound cash flow which is a colorful term that is often used to describe capital flowing into the mainland from Hong Kong. Two markets that have become an attractive destination for northbound cash flow is the Shanghai stock exchange and the Shenzhen stock exchange. This paper investigates the impact, if any, of northbound cash flows on investor sentiment for investors residing in mainland China. In other words, the paper attempts to ascertain whether the extent of northbound cash flows influences the extent to which mainland investors feel either bullish or bearish about the market. The research objective is addressed using quantitative models and focuses on the Shanghai and Shenzhen stock exchange. Research results indicate that northbound cash flows from Hong Kong significantly impacts investor sentiment in mainland China. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
376. Revisiting variation affordance: applying variation theory in the design of educational software.
- Author
-
Lam, Ho Cheong
- Subjects
- *
EDUCATION software , *SOFTWARE architecture , *INSTRUCTIONAL systems design , *PHENOMENOGRAPHY , *PRIMARY schools , *ACTIVE learning - Abstract
Variation theory, which is a theory of learning developed by Marton and others, has quickly become popular in education research. Our purpose of this paper is to articulate the application of variation theory in the form of a number of concrete design principles that offer prescriptive and practical guidelines for improving the designs of educational software programs. To achieve this, we analyzed a wide range of educational software programs produced over the years in our previous projects for learning Chinese characters. From this analysis, we identified four design principles, namely, (i) not aiming to test but to bring about learning, (ii) focusing on a specific object of learning, (iii) allowing learners to explore variation to be learned, and (iv) keeping all other aspects invariant. These design principles are specialized for designing how learners interact with educational software programs, which is the major practical contribution of this paper. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
377. Executive-Led Planning Regime of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region.
- Author
-
Jhaveri, Swati
- Subjects
DISTRIBUTION planning ,GOVERNMENT executives ,URBAN planning - Abstract
This paper considers the distribution and accountability of planning powers in the urban planning regime of the Hong Kong SAR. This paper identifies the power holders who are charged with steering urban planning, with a view to demonstrating that despite the existence of a multi-actor and consultative process, there is a still a concentration of power on planning matters in particular organs of the executive branch of government. It is not unusual for planning powers to be concentrated in the executive branch of government: however, in the Hong Kong context it is the particular concentration of powers in a small circle of power holders within the executive branch that might need reform. The discussion concludes with sketching out possible ways of dispersing power, within and outside the executive branch, to enhance the legitimacy of the planning regime, without compromising its efficacy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
378. FinTech innovation and knowledge flows in Hong Kong's financial sector: a social network analysis approach.
- Author
-
Au, Anson
- Subjects
FOREIGN banking industry ,SOCIAL network analysis ,FINANCIAL technology ,PATENT databases ,BANKING industry ,DEVELOPMENT banks - Abstract
Purpose: This paper aims to examine how financial technology (FinTech) knowledge from foreign firms flows into and among elite commercial banks in Hong Kong's financial sector to drive innovation. Design/methodology/approach: Using social network analysis and regression analysis on a novel database of patents held by Hong Kong's elite commercial banks, this paper examines the relationships between network position and FinTech knowledge flow. Findings: This paper finds four untold patterns of innovation and inequality in Hong Kong's financial sector: only three banks are responsible for all the FinTech knowledge entering Hong Kong; most foreign FinTech comes from the USA through Hong Kong and Shanghai Banking Corporation, whereas most FinTech from China enters through Fubon Bank and Development Bank of Singapore; older banks and banks with more connections to firms inside Asia are more likely to import FinTech; the most beneficial sources of FinTech for a bank's network position are firms from outside Asia. Originality/value: Despite the well-documented volumes of cross-border and cross-continental movement of financial institutions in Hong Kong, there is little work on the knowledge flows that underwrite this mobility. This paper addresses this gap by using FinTech knowledge flows to map the distribution of innovation, network position and competitive advantage in Hong Kong's financial sector. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
379. Bilingualism and law in Hong Kong: Translatophobia and Translatophilia.
- Author
-
Lee, Tong King
- Subjects
- *
BILINGUALISM , *IDEOLOGY , *DISCOURSE analysis , *ANXIETY - Abstract
Although translation may be considered the sine qua non of bilingual legislation, the perceived authenticity and equivalence of different language versions of the same law are contingent on the disavowal of translation. Yet precisely because of such disavowal, translated versions of law are paradoxically valorized as equal in meaning and status to their originals, notwithstanding possible infelicities in the translation, so as not to compromise the precepts of legal bilingualism. This paper theorizes such a situation in relation to Hong Kong's bilingual jurisdiction. On the basis of relevant legislation, official guidelines on statutory interpretation, and court cases in Hong Kong, the paper proposes the terms Translatophobia and Translatophilia to highlight the double bind that entraps translation in institutional discourses on legal bilingualism. More specifically, it reveals the language ideology generating anxieties over translation, and observes how such anxieties may be channelled into a fetishization of translation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
380. Determination of Air Urban Heat Island Parameters with High-Precision GPS Data.
- Author
-
Mendez-Astudillo, Jorge, Lau, Lawrence, Tang, Yu-Ting, and Moore, Terry
- Subjects
- *
URBAN heat islands , *GPS receivers , *ATMOSPHERIC temperature , *ABSOLUTE value - Abstract
The urban heat island (UHI) effect can contribute to extreme heat exposure. This can be detrimental to human health. In this paper, we propose a method to estimate air temperature to evaluate the spatial distribution and to monitor the intensity of the air urban heat island (AUHI) from existing GPS infrastructure. The proposed algorithm is based on the relationship between the refractivity of the troposphere and environmental variables, as well as the relationships between the zenith tropospheric delay (ZTD), a by-product of the precise point positioning technique, and the refractivity of the troposphere. The advantage of GPS data is its high temporal resolution and the availability of embedded GPS receivers. In this paper, GPS-derived ZTD data from stations in the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR) of China and Tokyo in Japan are processed to estimate the hourly AUHI intensity. The results derived from this technique are validated using meteorological data in the same cities. Mean absolute error values of 0.79 °C in Hong Kong and 0.22 °C in Tokyo are found from data from the summer. Moreover, an overall accuracy of 0.51 °C is found. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
381. Denaturalizing natural tropes: thinking through ecocritical discourse in post-handover Hong Kong.
- Author
-
Yee, Winnie L. M.
- Subjects
- *
ECOCRITICISM , *POSTCOLONIALISM , *PUBLIC demonstrations , *CULTURE - Abstract
Environmental problems, including climate change, exhaustion of natural resources, and persistent degradation of air quality, have escalated in the name of development despite the warnings of scientists and environmentalists. Written when the interconnectedness of the globe is evident in the Coronavirus pandemic and extensive carbon footprints, this paper examines the role of ecocriticism in illuminating the condition of a city such as Hong Kong, which is susceptible to contagion because its success is based on its interconnectedness with the world through the flow of people, resources, finance, and tourism. How does ecocritical discourse help us to see the ways Hong Kong's success has contributed to its vulnerability? What are the tropes that defined the development of Hong Kong in the colonial period and how have they been re-imagined in the post-handover period? Will Hong Kong's post-handover reappropriation of nature encourage other former colonies to adopt a green agenda and lead to the cross-fertilization of ecocritcal, historical, cultural and social discourses? This paper adopts an ecocritical perspective and revisits some of the central natural symbols that have shaped the grand narrative of Hong Kong. It reconsiders the natural tropes— the barren rock — that were used to reinforce colonial superiority, the ways that geography has determined the city's destiny, and the role of the official flower in the creation of the city's identity. Citing developments in the post-handover period (the Save Choi Yuen Village movement, the rise of organic communities, and the tactics of protestors in the summer of 2019), the paper reveals how natural tropes have been liberated from their traditional associations. Hong Kong shows not only the ways in which the human and non-human can work together interdependently but also the processes of identity formation in the period after decolonization and in an age of globalism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
382. Comparing newspapers in mainland China and Hong Kong: The limits of media systems theory.
- Author
-
Wang, Haiyan and Lyu, Nan
- Subjects
MEDIA studies ,SYSTEMS theory ,NEWSPAPERS ,MARKET positioning ,CONTENT analysis - Abstract
Most comparative studies of media are undertaken between different countries. It is normally assumed that there are considerable commonalities between the media in a given country and it is usually argued that these are sufficient to form a 'media system', which can usefully be contrasted with that of another country. It is relatively unusual to find two sets of media within one country that are sufficiently distinct as be considered as different systems. This paper explores one of the exceptions to that general rule: the case of the Hong Kong media as compared with those of mainland China. Given the different historical and current situations of the two locations at the time the research was conducted, it is to be expected that the kinds of journalism practised would be radically dissimilar. The results of a content analysis of five mainland and three Hong Kong papers demonstrate that, at the aggregate level, there are indeed important differences. A more detailed analysis, however, demonstrates that each of the three Hong Kong papers is in fact closer to mainland groupings than they are to each other. One Hong Kong paper, Ta Kung Pao, is closest to the most 'official' grouping of mainland papers, while Ming Pao falls in to a grouping with the 'liberal' mainland paper. The now defunct Apple Daily, on the other hand, has the closest links with the 'popular official' mainland press. Taken together, these findings suggest that the common assumption that different forms of journalism are best compared on a national basis is incorrect and that factors like market position and ideological orientation have an important influence on the kinds of journalism practised across borders. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
383. Would violent tactics cost a democratic movement its international support? A critical examination of Hong Kong's anti-ELAB movement using sentiment analysis and topic modelling.
- Author
-
Lui, Elizabeth
- Subjects
SENTIMENT analysis ,CIVIL society ,SOLIDARITY ,MICROBLOGS ,INTERNATIONAL relations ,COST ,DEMOCRATIZATION - Abstract
This paper aims to address an important yet under-studied issue – how does violence from the side of the protestors affect overseas support for a democratic movement? The importance of this question is twofold. First, while violence and radicalization are not exactly unfamiliar territories for scholars of contentious politics, they do not receive as much attention when their effects spill beyond the domestic arenas. Second, this study seeks to examine international solidarity with democratic movements at the civil society level, which differs substantially from the conventional elite-centric approach when it comes to the intersection between democratization and international relations. Against this backdrop, this paper considers the relationship between violent tactics employed by the protestors during the anti-extradition movement and the sentiment expressed by people elsewhere towards the protests. To this end, a total of 9,659,770 tweets were extracted using Twitter Application Programming Interface during the period of 1 June 2019–31 January 2020. Leveraging computational methods such as topic modelling and sentiment analysis, findings in this paper demonstrate that a majority of foreign Twitter users were supportive of the protestors while held relatively negative sentiments against the government as well as the police. In addition, this study reveals that, broadly speaking, violence might cost a democratic movement by its international support, but could also garner more attention at times. Despite its restricted scope, this paper hopefully will shed some useful light on the dynamics underlying international solidarity for a democratic movement abroad as well as the complex mechanisms of interactions between people who protest at home and those who observe from overseas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
384. The Parramatta Female Factory Precinct: Beyond Commemorating Trauma.
- Author
-
Schutz, Lauren
- Subjects
SOCIAL space ,VIETNAMESE people ,AUSTRALIAN history ,FEMALES ,MENTAL health - Abstract
This paper focuses on the Parramatta Female Factory Precinct (PFFP), located in Sydney, New South Wales, a site that reflects the history of institutionalization in Australia following European arrival. The future of the site largely remains to be determined. However, the Parramatta Female Factory Memory Project established in 2013 by the Parragirls, a group of former residents, has highlighted the potential use of art and memory in creating an accessible and inclusive space with a social justice focus. This includes the potential of the site to encourage dialogue concerning Indigenous history; institutionalization in the past, present, and future; the treatment of marginalized communities; and mental health. This paper explores the future of the precinct as a Site of Conscience and the challenges presented by the existing political context and the dominant Western heritage management framework. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
385. How Learning Study could empower teachers to embrace education initiatives through research–practice partnership in Hong Kong.
- Author
-
Ko, Po Yuk
- Subjects
ENGLISH teachers ,INSTRUCTIONAL systems design ,PHENOMENOLOGY ,COMPUTER literacy ,CAPACITY building - Abstract
The issue of the "research-practice gap" has been a long-standing concern in the education community. To tackle this issue, there is a growing interest in research–practice partnerships (RPPs) to connect research with practice by providing solutions for improving practice in schools. Although studies have reported that constructive relationship would produce positive outcomes, establishing long-term and mutually beneficial RPPs requires further investigation. In Hong Kong, the Learning Study (LS) approach with Variation Theory derived from phenomenology as the theoretical framework for pedagogical design has been adopted as a RPP model and has sustained for two decades. Like many RPPs models, LS approach has been facing different challenges when teachers are increasingly held accountable for meeting new demands from education reform. In this respect, this paper explores the challenges and strategies of the LS approach as a RPP model and its conditions of success. It reports a case study of how a group of English Language teachers adopting a LS approach while integrating education initiatives in their instructional design. The findings have identified trust building, teacher's capacity building and visible outcomes as possible key factors of effective RPP model. This paper may shed light on the implementation of research–practice partnerships. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
386. A Transformation of the Mainland Chinese Market in Hong Kong's Tourism Industry.
- Author
-
Bu, Naipeng, Fu, Xiaoxiao, Kong, Haiyan, and Okumus, Fevzi
- Subjects
TOURISM ,DOMESTIC tourism ,INTERNATIONAL tourism ,SUSTAINABLE tourism ,TRAVEL restrictions - Abstract
Copyright of Journal of China Tourism Research is the property of Taylor & Francis Ltd and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
387. Analysis on Characteristics of Temporal and Spatial Evolution of Building Heights in the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area Based on GEE Platform.
- Author
-
WU Zi-luan, LIU Xiao-ping, and LUO Ming
- Subjects
REMOTE sensing by radar ,OPTICAL remote sensing ,REMOTE sensing ,URBAN growth ,URBAN renewal ,URBAN studies - Abstract
At present, most existing studies on the urban building height are limited to a single city, and large-scale urban building height data are still lacking. Based on the Google Earth Engine platform, this paper first integrates radar remote sensing, optical remote sensing and other multi-source remote sensing data to retrieve the average heights of buildings at the scale of 500 m x 500 m in the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area (GBA) in 2015. The average heights of buildings from 1985 to 2014 in GBA are then reconstructed by considering the processes of urban expansion, urban renewal and greening restoration. On this basis,the temporal and spatial evolution characteristics of urban building heights from 1985 to 2015 are analyzed. The results show that the distribution pattern of building heights in GBA in 2015 corresponds well with the pattern of regional economic development. The cities in GBA exhibit four growth patterns of urban average building heights from 1985 to 2015, namely, low growth with high base (Hong Kong and Macao),high growth with medium base (Shenzhen),low growth with medium base (Guangzhou, Zhuhai, Jiangmen and Zhaoqing), and high growth with low base (Foshan, Dongguan, Zhongshan and Huizhou). The evolution of urban structure in the built-up area can be divided into three types: upward expansion (Dongguan, Foshan, Shenzhen, Zhongshan and Macao), upward and outward expansion (Guangzhou and Hong Kong) and outward expansion (Jiangmen, Huizhou, Zhaoqing and Zhuhai). The reconstruction method of urban building height data proposed in this paper can be used to analyze the temporal and spatial distribution and growth patterns of urban building heights in different cities in the GBA, as well as help to understand the urban development process in the GBA, and provide references for other city studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
388. In search of sustainable construction: the role of building environmental assessment methods as policies enforcing green building.
- Author
-
Leiringer, Roine, Gottlieb, Stefan Christoffer, Fang, Yan, and Mo, Xiaoyu
- Subjects
SUSTAINABLE construction ,BUILDING design & construction ,SUSTAINABLE buildings ,ACTION theory (Psychology) - Abstract
Over the past 20 years, building environmental assessment methods (BEAMs) have been promoted as a means to achieve more sustainable and environmentally friendly (green) buildings, as well as more sustainable practices in the building process at large. These schemes have come to be considered as effective mechanisms to transform building markets and are seen to play a significant role in the mainstreaming of green building practices. In many countries, BEAMs are now used as policy instruments and are increasingly being mandated across a variety of public, but also private, sector projects. In this paper, we examine BEAMs as policy instruments and explore their potential to affect change in construction. Drawing on the theory of strategic action fields, and using the case of HK-BEAM, we discuss the origins, development and application of BEAMs and the limited impact that their mandate has on construction practice. The paper concludes with reflections on the need to further our understanding of how the construction sector works and who has the power, and the will, to make changes in construction practice happen. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
389. ICRA2014 Call for Papers.
- Subjects
ROBOTICS conferences ,CONFERENCES & conventions - Abstract
Prospective authors are requested to submit new, unpublished manuscripts for inclusion in the upcoming event described in this call for papers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
390. First Announcement and Call for Papers.
- Subjects
CONFERENCES & conventions ,STRUCTURAL engineering conferences - Abstract
Information on the First International Conference on Performance-Based and Life-Cycle Structural Engineering, to be held from December 5 to 7, 2012 in Hong Kong, China is presented.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
391. Special Issue: Selected papers from ICPLA 2002.
- Author
-
McLeod, Sharynne
- Subjects
CONFERENCES & conventions ,ASSOCIATIONS, institutions, etc. ,PHONETICS - Abstract
Focuses on the proceedings of the 9th meeting of the International Clinical Phonetics and Linguistics Association held in Hong Kong, China in 2002. Topics; Participants; Publication of papers and articles.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
392. Preface to Special Topic: Papers from the 2009 Conference on Advances in Microfluidics and Nanofluidics, The Hong Kong University of Science & Technology, Hong Kong, 2009.
- Author
-
Yeo, Leslie Y.
- Subjects
CONFERENCES & conventions ,MICROFLUIDICS ,NANOFLUIDS ,CHEMICAL systems ,BIOLOGICAL systems - Abstract
The inaugural conference on Advances in Microfluidics and Nanofluidics was held at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology on 5–7 January 2009 and brought together leading researchers from across a wide variety of disciplines from North America, Europe, Asia, and Oceania. This Special Topic section forms the second of the two issues dedicated to original contributions covering both fundamental physicochemical aspects of microfluidics and nanofluidics as well as their applications to the miniaturization of chemical and biological systems that were presented at the conference. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
393. Back-analysis of laterally loaded bored piles.
- Author
-
Nip, D. C. N. and Ng, C. W. W.
- Subjects
- *
PILES & pile driving , *ENGINEERING geology , *CONCRETE , *PAPER - Abstract
Field lateral load tests were conducted on two single 1.5 m diameter large bored piles in Hong Kong. The test piles are embedded in superficial deposits and weathered rocks with various degrees of decomposition. In this paper, the pile load test results are interpreted and reported. A simple and rational method of back-analysis for long piles, using inclinometer data and assuming a fourth-order polynomial to represent the shape of soil reaction profile, is introduced. The method, requiring only simple spreadsheet-type operations, makes it possible to incorporate non-linear concrete behaviour in the back-analysis, and to deduce the p-y curves for future design of piles in similar ground conditions. In order to verify the rational method, an analysis is carried out using the back-analysed p-y curves, and the predictions are found to agree well with the measured pile head deflections. This proposed method demonstrates how p-y curves are back-analysed rationally for long piles embedded in complex ground conditions, in contrast to traditional back-analyses using recommended p-y curves for a uniform soil stratum. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
394. Pursuing quality in early childhood education with a government-regulated voucher: views of parents and service providers in Hong Kong.
- Author
-
Wong, Jessie Ming Sin and Rao, Nirmala
- Subjects
- *
EDUCATIONAL vouchers , *EDUCATIONAL quality , *EDUCATION policy , *PRESCHOOL education , *PARENT attitudes , *CHILDREN , *EARLY childhood education - Abstract
This paper critically examines parents' and service providers' reception of the Pre-primary Education Voucher Scheme (PEVS), which was designed to enhance the quality of early childhood education in Hong Kong. The PEVS was a universal voucher policy that was designed to harness market forces and increase direct governmental control of quality in a private education market wherein pre-academic training and competition are emphasized. This paper presents the results of a survey of 413 parents and 215 service providers. Findings indicated that despite the government's efforts in promoting quality as 'child-centeredness' and the efforts of preschools in meeting the quality standards, parents remained relatively neutral about the policy's influence on preschool quality. However, all parents appreciated the financial benefits they accrued from the PEVS, and more socially-advantaged families allocated the additional disposable income on extra educational activities and programs for their children. Findings suggest the implementation of the PEVS in a fully private market might unexpectedly exacerbate inequity in educational opportunities. The enrolment size of the preschool was also found to be a determinant of respondents' views of the PEVS. We argue the government's idea of 'joyful learning' may be even harder to achieve with the current means of service governance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
395. Customization of e-textile sensory tools for people with dementia.
- Author
-
Tan, Jeanne, Chen, Amy, Shao, Li, Kim, Heeyoung, and Ge, Lan
- Subjects
DEMENTIA ,CUSTOMIZATION ,STAKEHOLDER analysis ,PARTICIPATORY design ,COGNITIVE ability - Abstract
Sensory activities are used to increase social engagement for people with dementia, who may struggle to participate in activities due to deteriorating cognitive functions. Sensory tools are used but these can be inappropriate since they are not designed for people with dementia. This paper details the design of an e-textile sensory tool for people with dementia, with stakeholders in Mainland China. The concept, a sensory wall, was derived from a previous co-design project in Hong Kong. However, the design context differs, and this work highlights barriers to implementing co-design in sensory tool design. Instead, this project took a collaborative customization approach. This paper describes the design processes and evaluations for the first and second sensory wall, with context on dementia care in Mainland China. This paper highlights considerations in the design of a sensory tool for people with dementia, and the benefits of stakeholder engagement in sensory tool design. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
396. 'PRACTICALLY AN ACT OF WAR': A Cross-Border Arrest in British Kowloon and Hong Kong-China Relations on the Frontier.
- Author
-
TSE HO NAM
- Subjects
GOVERNMENTAL investigations ,BOUNDARY disputes ,ARREST ,JUSTICE administration ,VILLAGES - Abstract
Copyright of Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society Hong Kong is the property of Royal Asiatic Society Hong Kong and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
397. Island ferry travel during COVID-19: charting the recovery of local tourism in Hong Kong.
- Author
-
Lee, H. Y. and Leung, Kevin Yin Kiu
- Subjects
RURAL tourism ,URBAN tourism ,INTERNATIONAL tourism ,TOURIST attractions ,TOURISM ,COVID-19 ,IMMIGRATION enforcement ,BILLBOARDS - Abstract
With stringent immigration controls implemented by governments around the world, the year 2020 has seen global aviation and tourism industries grind to a complete halt. However, COVID-19 seems to have been the catalyst for the rise of local tourism around the globe. While the literature has long focused on the demand and supply of international tourism, the significance of local tourism should not be overlooked. This paper uses a novel and comprehensive mixed methods approach that considers 1) internet keyword search trends for tourist destinations, 2) news announcements on social media platforms, 3) ridership data provided by ferry companies and 4) participant observations in the field to examine the growth of local tourism in Hong Kong during the city's first and second waves of COVID-19, shedding light on the growth of rural, island destinations in the city. By investigating the trends and patterns of local tourism in Hong Kong, this article offers recommendations for policymakers and tourism stakeholders not only in Hong Kong but also around the world to facilitate the development of local tourism. The paper concludes by asking readers to consider the myriad possibilities of repositioning tourist destinations to offer alternative tourism forms that are more sustainable and can be resilient to negative events such as COVID-19. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
398. Interpersonal Ties and Health Care: Examining the Social Networks of Filipino Migrant Domestic Workers in Hong Kong.
- Author
-
Piocos III, Carlos M., Vilog, Ron Bridget T., and Bernadas, Jan Michael Alexandre C.
- Subjects
HOUSEHOLD employees ,MIGRANT labor ,FILIPINOS ,SOCIAL networks ,SOCIAL determinants of health ,MEDICAL care - Abstract
This paper explores the relationship between the social networks of Filipino migrant domestic workers (FMDWs) in Hong Kong and the accessibility of health resources, especially for migrant women. This study primarily draws evidence from ethnographic interviews with 20 FMDWs in Hong Kong. Likewise, this analysis also relied on field notes from participant observations during formal meetings and informal activities. This paper reveals that FMDWs strategically use their strong and weak ties in managing risks and accessing resources for their health and well-being by deciding among their social network who and what to share regarding health concerns. They conscientiously negotiate their rights and opportunities with their employers, who can also provide access to social and institutional resources. Finally, FMDWs participate in conversations and discourses on health-related policies of their home and host countries with their social network. By focusing on the social networks of FMDWs in Hong Kong, this paper conceptually and empirically broadens conversations about how migration becomes a social determinant of health. Moreover, it illustrates how migrant social networks are organized, activated, and mobilized around discourses on state-crafted health policies towards migrant women. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
399. Rapport building by Chinese celebrities on Weibo and Facebook.
- Author
-
Lin, Minfen and Wu, Doreen D.
- Subjects
EMOTICONS & emojis ,INTERNET terminology ,SOCIAL bonds ,FAME ,CELEBRITIES ,SOCIAL media - Abstract
The paper examines how Chinese celebrities build rapport with their followers on social media, with a comparison between the Chinese mainland (on Weibo) and Hong Kong (on Facebook) celebrities. Rapport building is conceptualized as language use in promoting social bonding and emotional involvement and as achieved via at least two aspects: use of relational acts and choice of interactional features. Twelve months of postings by twelve most-followed Weibo and Facebook celebrities from the Chinese mainland and Hong Kong in 2017 have been retrieved and analyzed. It is found that the prevalent relational acts commonly used by both Weibo and Facebook celebrities to build rapport with their followers include sharing information, retweeting information and directives, among others; and the commonly prevalent interactive features include the use of colloquialism, emoji & emoticons, and hashtags or @, and the like. Nonetheless, significant differences also exist in that while Weibo celebrities tend to use more acts of showing stance, Facebook celebrities use more acts of showing appreciation; Weibo celebrities tend to use more colloquialism, emoji & emoticons, and internet slang, Facebook celebrities tend to use more English codemixing and vernacular expressions. Finally, the paper concludes with a discussion and explanation of the commonalities and differences between Weibo and Facebook celebrities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
400. Research on the Time-Frequency Spillover Effect of High-Frequency Stock Price and Economic Policy Uncertainty.
- Author
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Zhu, Shuzhen, He, Zhen, and Wang, Suxue
- Subjects
- *
ECONOMIC policy , *MARKET timing , *STOCK prices , *HANG Seng Index , *STOCK exchanges - Abstract
Through the construction of wavelet coherence analysis and frequency-domain spillover framework, this paper makes a comparative study of the volatility spillover effects of international economic policy uncertainty (EPU) on China's Shanghai and Hong Kong stock market from a time-frequency perspective. To fully reflect the international EPU, this paper selects China, the United States, Australia, and the United Kingdom and uses the monthly EPU index of these countries and regions. China chooses China's EPU index and Hong Kong's EPU index. At the same time, the 5-minute high-frequency volatility of the Shanghai Composite Index (SSEC) and the Hang Seng Index (HSI) is selected to represent the Shanghai and Hong Kong's stock market, respectively. It is found that there are obvious differences between the EPU and the dependence of the stock market in time domain and frequency domain, and the lead-lag relationship between them has time-varying characteristics. Static and dynamic spillover effects play a dominant role in the analysis of medium- and long-term spillover effects. In particular, the EPU and the risk spillover of the Hong Kong stock market are stronger than those of the Shanghai stock market, and the dynamic frequency-domain net risk spillover between them has frequency characteristics, and there are two-way and asymmetric risk spillovers. This provides a certain reference for policy makers to improve the safety management of financial markets and for market investors to optimize their portfolios. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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