5 research outputs found
Be Careful What You Wish For: The Comparative Impacts of Juvenile versus Criminal Court Sanctions on Recidivism among Adolescent Felony Offenders
Sharing the Blame? Local Electoral Accountability and Centralized School Finance in California
Place, identity and immigrant communities: The organisation of the Yulan Festival in post-war Hong Kong
In the process of migration, some traditions persist while others do not. The Yulan Festival, also known as the Ghost Festival, continues to be observed by different subethnic Chinese migrant groups in Hong Kong for a variety of reasons. Although the festival organisation accentuates subethnic distinctions, paradoxically it also enables different groups to integrate into the larger community. The activities articulate various meanings of 'place' - as 'ancestral place' on the mainland where the rituals are believed to originate, as the specific locality/neighbourhood in Hong Kong where the festival is held, and Hong Kong as a whole. This article, based on interviews with Chiu Chow and Hoklo participants, shows how they think of the different meanings of 'place', which in turn reflects the way they make sense of the process of migration. © Victoria University of Wellington, 2005.link_to_subscribed_fulltex
