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Hong Kong’s New Identity Politics

Lillian Ngan reviews a new book about the manoeuvres of identity in the quickly evolving political and cultural landscape of Hong Kong.

Reactionary Democracy

Ben Margulies reviews a book that examines the complex politics of racism that is at play in some of the major democracies of the developed world.

Being at Large

Sam Mickey reviews a book that interrogates freedom in the age of alternative facts.

HKRB Essays: The Long Goodbye

As the UK government signals a potential ‘path to citizenship’ to nearly 3 million potential Hong Kong BNOs, and Trump starts the process of revoking Hong Kong’s special treatment, journalist and cultural historian Stuart Walton reflects on public and private histories.

Vigil: Hong Kong on the Brink

Historian Jeff Wasserstrom shares with Daniel C. Tsang his historically tempered observations about Hong Kong.

Found in Transition

Ka-Lee Wong reviews an assessment of Hong Kong and its culture two decades after its reversion to China.

Chernobyl: History of a Tragedy

Sasha Dovzhyk on the haunting banality of Europe’s biggest nuclear catastrophe.

I Have Become the Tide

As the Bharatiya Janata Party looks set to take a general election majority in an India increasingly hostile to minorities, Ragini Mohite reviews Githa Hariharan’s important novel on caste inequality and Dalit experience

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