Solidarity and Implications of a Leaderless Movement in Hong Kong: Its Strengths and Limitations

被引:22
|
作者
Lai, Yan-Ho [1 ]
Sing, Ming [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ London, Sch Law, Sch Oriental & African Studies, London, England
[2] Hong Kong Univ Sci & Technol, Div Social Sci, Hong Kong, Peoples R China
关键词
leaderless movement; democratization; civil society; Hong Kong; China; ANTI-EXTRADITION; ACTIVISM;
D O I
10.1525/j.postcomstud.2020.53.4.41
中图分类号
D81 [国际关系];
学科分类号
030207 ;
摘要
In 2019, what began in Hong Kong as a series of rallies against a proposal to permit extraditions to mainland China grew into a raft of anti-authoritarian protests and challenges to Beijing's grip on the city. Given the gravest political crisis confronting Hong Kong in decades, this research investigates why the protests have lacked centralized leaders and why the solidarity among the peaceful and militant protesters has been immense. This article also examines the strengths and limitations of this leaderless movement with different case studies. The authors argue that serious threats to the commonly cherished values in Hong Kong, amid the absence of stable and legitimate leaders in its democracy movement, underpinned the formation of a multitude of decentralized decision-making platforms that orchestrated the protests in 2019. Those platforms involved both well-known movement leaders organizing conventional peaceful protests and anonymous activists crafting a diversity of tactics in ingenious ways, ranging from economic boycotts, human chains around the city, artistic protests via LennonWalls, to the occupying of the international airport. The decentralized decision-making platforms, while having generated a boon to the movement with their beneficial tactical division of labor, also produced risks to the campaign. The risks include the lack of legitimate representatives for conflict-deescalating negotiations, rise in legitimacy-sapping violence, and susceptibility to underestimating the risks of various tactics stemming from a dearth of thorough political communication among anonymous participants who had different goals and degrees of risk tolerance. In short, Hong Kong's anti-extradition movement in 2019 sheds light on the basis of leaderless movements, and on both the strengths and risks of such movements.
引用
收藏
页码:41 / 67
页数:27
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Be Water: Technologies in the Leaderless Anti-ELAB Movement in Hong Kong
    Kow, Yong Ming
    Nardi, Bonnie
    Cheng, Wai Kuen
    [J]. PROCEEDINGS OF THE 2020 CHI CONFERENCE ON HUMAN FACTORS IN COMPUTING SYSTEMS (CHI'20), 2020,
  • [2] Democracy movement in Hong Kong and its implications for South China
    Hing, LS
    [J]. JOURNAL OF CONTEMPORARY ASIA, 1997, 27 (02) : 198 - 216
  • [3] Solidarity in the Anti-Extradition Bill movement in Hong Kong
    Lee, Francis
    [J]. CRITICAL ASIAN STUDIES, 2020, 52 (01) : 18 - 32
  • [4] Civic Solidarity in Hong Kong and Taiwan
    Lo, Ming-Cheng Miriam
    Bettinger, Christopher P.
    [J]. CHINA QUARTERLY, 2009, (197): : 183 - 203
  • [6] Geohazards of slope mass movement and its prevention in Hong Kong
    Chen, H
    Lee, CF
    [J]. ENGINEERING GEOLOGY, 2004, 76 (1-2) : 3 - 25
  • [7] Rising Strengths Hong Kong SAR in Bioinformatics
    Chakraborty, Chiranjib
    Doss, C. George Priya
    Zhu, Hailong
    Agoramoorthy, Govindasamy
    [J]. INTERDISCIPLINARY SCIENCES-COMPUTATIONAL LIFE SCIENCES, 2017, 9 (02) : 224 - 236
  • [8] Rising Strengths Hong Kong SAR in Bioinformatics
    Chiranjib Chakraborty
    C. George Priya Doss
    Hailong Zhu
    Govindasamy Agoramoorthy
    [J]. Interdisciplinary Sciences: Computational Life Sciences, 2017, 9 : 224 - 236
  • [9] Loving Hong Kong: Unity and Solidarity in the Politics of Belonging
    Shih, Chih-yu
    [J]. TELOS, 2023, (202): : 43 - 65
  • [10] Coupling Social Solidarity and Social Harmony in Hong Kong
    Chau-kiu Cheung
    Stephen Kan Ma
    [J]. Social Indicators Research, 2011, 103 : 145 - 167