Structured in three parts, i.e., HK–UK in continuum and the new HK diaspora in the UK; The new HK diaspora beyond Europe; and Transforming population geographies in HK, the chapters in this book analyse the post-2019 migration that occurred in the midst of the city’s fast-changing socio-political condition. The contributors focus on migrants’ experiences of migration and settlement, and their integration efforts in the destinations. This book also explores the home-building processes and identity changes among HK immigrants, how migration policies are embedded in complex national and regional politics, and how this new wave of migration has impacted HK. It suggests that new HK migrant communities have resulted in the formation of distinctive HK diasporas and a “Global Hong Kong”. It shows how migration evolves in this age of globalisation and hypermobility, alongside global geopolitics and the changing social and political environment in Asia.
A valuable contribution to the understanding of HK migration in particular and Asian migration in general, this book will be of interest to overseas Chinese studies, diaspora and migration studies, and Asian studies.
Yuk Wah Chan is Associate Professor at the City University of Hong Kong. Her research interests cover international migration, tourism, borderland, identity, and food studies. She has published a number of volumes on Asian migration and diasporas, including New Chinese Migrations: Mobility, Home, and Inspirations (Routledge 2017, co-edited with Sin Yee Koh). She is one of the Series Editors of the Routledge Series on Asian Migration.
Yvette To is Assistant Professor at The Hong Kong Polytechnic University. Her research covers migration intermediaries and settlement patterns of migrants, and she is the author of Contested Development in China’s Transition to an Innovation-driven Economy (Routledge, 2022).