The young activists and the anti-patriotic education movement in postcolonial Hong Kong: Some insights from Twitter

Chi Tat Larry CHAN

Research output: Contribution to conferencePapers

Abstract

An extraordinary large-scale student movement in Hong Kong successfully forced the Government to withdraw a patriotic education proposal in 2012. The student group has attracted serious scrutiny from the pro-government camp because of the students’ unusually young age and remarkable mobilizing power. This study aims to explore the community structures and identify significant members in the student network, and to shed light on our understanding of the formation of young activists’ sense of civic identity in the Internet age. Techniques of social network analysis were employed. It is argued that the role of adult activists and the role of social media are inadequately researched in civic education studies. Moreover, it is further argued that the postcolonial city presents a kind of phobia of talking about adult-student relationship in civic action, which may risk hindering rigorous discussion in youth civic engagement.
Original languageEnglish
Publication statusPublished - Jul 2013
EventThe 10th International Conference of the International Association for Citizenship, Social and Economics Education - The University of Auckland, New Zealand
Duration: 18 Jul 201320 Jul 2013
https://www.eenz.com/past-event-iacsee13.htm

Conference

ConferenceThe 10th International Conference of the International Association for Citizenship, Social and Economics Education
Abbreviated titleIACSEE 2013
Country/TerritoryNew Zealand
CityThe University of Auckland
Period18/07/1320/07/13
Internet address

Citation

Chan, C. (2013, July). The young activists and the anti-patriotic education movement in postcolonial Hong Kong: Some insights from Twitter. Paper presented at the IACSEE 10th International Conference 2013, The University of Auckland, New Zealand.

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