Michael B. Yahuda's 1997 book analyzes the political and economic implications of Hong Kong's return to China. The study explores challenges like the clash of political cultures, problematic negotiations, and conflicting economic interests. It concludes that a laissez-faire approach to Hong Kong markets could maximize China's benefits from sovereignty.
Use Cases
- Analyzing political culture clashes based on the description of cultural differences
- Studying negotiation strategies based on the mention of problematic negotiations
- Examining economic policy impacts based on the discussion of conflicting economic interests
- Researching sovereignty transitions based on the analysis of Hong Kong's return
Strengths
- Analysis focuses on a specific historical event (Hong Kong's 1997 return)
- Explores multiple interrelated domains: politics, economics, and sociology
Limitations
- Row count is unknown, which may limit suitability assessment
- Column-level documentation is absent; field semantics must be inferred after download
- Last update date is unknown; freshness unverified
Provenance
- Source
- Michael B. Yahuda
- Collection Method
- null
- Time Range
- Focuses on events up to and beyond 1997
- Freshness
- null
- Geography
- Hong Kong, China