

Hong Kong’s Struggle of Decolonization and Democracy: A Conversation with Ching Kwan Lee
Sep 25, 2025
Ching Kwan Lee, a UCLA sociology professor and author of Forever Hong Kong, dives into the complex narrative of Hong Kong’s decolonization struggle. She explains how the 2019 protests were not just a quest for democracy, but the result of two decades of identity redefinition. Lee contrasts British and Chinese colonialism, highlighting the tension between integration and control in Beijing's approach. Drawing parallels to Tibet and Taiwan, she emphasizes the broader implications of Hong Kong's fight against authoritarianism for global resistance movements.
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Personal Arrival At The June 16 March
- Ching Kwan Lee landed in Hong Kong on June 16, 2019 and marched with two million people that afternoon.
- That experience and the subsequent crackdown compelled her to record Hong Kongers' perspectives before history is rewritten.
2019 As Two-Decade Decolonization Peak
- The 2019 protests were the climax of a two-decade decolonization struggle, not only a democracy campaign.
- Protesters sought holistic self-determination: identity, economy, culture, and history, beyond just universal suffrage.
Double Colonization And Racial Logic
- Lee argues Hong Kong experienced 'double colonization' under Britain and then Beijing, both race-based but with different logics.
- British rule used racial difference; Beijing enforces a coercive sameness based on racialized nationalism.