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"Little Japan" in Hongkou: the Japanese community in Shanghai, 1895-1932.January 2004 (has links)
Mo Yajun. / Thesis (M.Phil.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2004. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 122-130). / Abstracts in English and Chinese. / Introduction --- p.1 / Chapter Part I: --- "Remapping Shanghai, Remapping Hongkou" --- p.4 / Chapter Chapter I. --- Reconfiguration of the urban space in modern Shanghai --- p.4 / Chapter 1.1 --- “Tri-cities´ة´ة in Shanghai: urban space in transformation --- p.4 / Chapter 1.2 --- "A divided city, a hybrid society" --- p.8 / Chapter Chapter II. --- How special was Hongkou district in Shanghai? --- p.10 / Chapter 2.1 --- "Where was ""Hongkou""?" --- p.10 / Chapter 2.2 --- "American Settlement: “the Cinderella among the settlements""" --- p.12 / Chapter 2.2.1 --- From waterways to waterfronts --- p.14 / Chapter 2.2.2 --- Bridges and roads --- p.16 / Chapter 2.3 --- New frontiers for new comers --- p.19 / Chapter Part II: --- Structuring of the Japanese Community in Hongkou District --- p.21 / Chapter Chapter III. --- The latecomers to Shanghai --- p.21 / Chapter 3.1 --- Why not an exclusive Japanese Concession? --- p.21 / Chapter 3.2 --- Population growth after 1895 --- p.25 / Chapter 3.3 --- "Choose Shanghai, choose Hongkou" --- p.30 / Chapter 3.3.1 --- """Why go to Shanghai?""" --- p.30 / Chapter 3.3.2 --- """Why choose Hongkou?""" --- p.33 / Chapter Chapter IV. --- The administration structure and the power system --- p.37 / Chapter 4.1 --- Japanese Consulate in Shanghai --- p.37 / Chapter 4.2 --- JRA': a 'self-governing' body run by the elites --- p.42 / Chapter 4.3 --- Public services and communal duties --- p.50 / Chapter 4.3.1 --- The JRA-run schools and their school system in Shanghai --- p.51 / Chapter 4.3.2 --- Japanese company in SVC --- p.55 / Chapter 4.3.3 --- Public health service --- p.57 / Chapter 4.3.4 --- Other services --- p.57 / Chapter Chapter V. --- "´بLittle Japan', a self-contained community" --- p.59 / Chapter 5.1 --- ´بKaishaha´ةvs. ´بDochakuha´ة --- p.59 / Chapter 5.2 --- A society formed by small traders --- p.64 / Chapter 5.3 --- Make Hongkou a Japan town --- p.68 / Chapter 5.3.1 --- Japanese streets' & ´بLittle Tokyo' --- p.68 / Chapter 5.3.2 --- Japanese lives in Hongkou --- p.71 / Chapter 5.3.3 --- ´بNagasaki ken-Shanghai shi´ة --- p.74 / Chapter Part III: --- Compromises and Conflicts --- p.76 / Chapter Chapter VI. --- Conflicts with compromises --- p.76 / Chapter 6.1 --- Japanese community and the Shanghai Municipal Council --- p.76 / Chapter 6.1.1 --- Representatives in Council --- p.77 / Chapter 6.1.2 --- Japanese participation in the SMP and other services in the SMC --- p.78 / Chapter 6.1.3 --- Japanese wanted more voice in the SMC --- p.81 / Chapter 6.2 --- The anti-Japanese boycotts and Japanese community --- p.82 / Chapter 6.2.1 --- The boycott as an economic tool --- p.83 / Chapter 6.2.2 --- The hostilities and the Japanese reaction --- p.86 / Chapter 6.3 --- Conflicts with compromises --- p.89 / Chapter Chapter VII. --- Shanghai 1932: An era ended --- p.92 / Conclusion --- p.99 / Notes --- p.102 / Appendices / Chapter Appendices A --- Glossaries --- p.148 / Chapter Appendices B --- Bibliography --- p.151 / List of Tables / Table / Chapter 1. --- “Hongkou´ح in different Gazetteers of Shanghai County --- p.11 / Chapter 2. --- "The Japanese Population in Shanghai, 1889-1909" --- p.27 / Chapter 3. --- "The Development of Japanese Population in Shanghai, 1912-1931" --- p.28 / Chapter 4. --- "Japanese Firms in Shanghai, in First Decade of Meiji Era" --- p.32 / Chapter 5. --- "The Geographical Origins of the Japanese Merchants in Shanghai, 1894" --- p.34 / Chapter 6. --- The Proportion of Japanese in Shanghai (1889-1892) --- p.38 / Chapter 7. --- The Members of JRA Administrative Committee in 1915 and 1922 --- p.48 / Chapter 8. --- The Enrollment of Japanese Primary Schools in Shanghai (1911-1932) --- p.52 / Chapter 9. --- The Japanese Schools run by the JRA --- p.55 / Chapter 10. --- The Proportions of Japanese Population in Different Professions in the Early 1910s --- p.60 / Chapter 11. --- The Different Status of “Kaishaha´ح and “Dochakuha´ح --- p.62 / Chapter 12. --- The Election Result of the Residents' Council of the JRA (1925,1929) --- p.63 / Chapter 13. --- The New Registered Japanese Commercial Firms in Shanghai (1918-1932) --- p.65 / Chapter 14. --- The Japanese population resided in Outer Hongkou Area --- p.70 / Chapter 15. --- "Japanese Small Businesses Opened inside the ""Japanese Streets Area"" (1924)" --- p.72 / List of Figures / Figure / Chapter 1. --- Shanghai Japanese Clubs (1903-1908) --- p.44 / Chapter 2. --- The Structure of Japanese Residents' Association --- p.47
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The secondary school principalship in China: leading at the cusp of change. / CUHK electronic theses & dissertations collectionJanuary 2009 (has links)
Because of the complexity of the phenomenon being studied, a qualitative methodology was adopted for the study. The research was anchored in the theoretical framework of symbolic interactionism. Interviews formed the chief data collection method. Eleven secondary school principals from Shanghai were selected through a form of purposive sampling. The study aimed to derive categories, typologies and theoretical models from the data to help explain the realities of the Chinese principalship. / Further interpretation across the major categories and initial typology exposed a set of tensions which captured some of the basic dynamics of the principalship in China. A dominant subtext across these tensions was the multiple accountabilities confronting the principals. The study found that the principals placed unquestionable emphasis on upward accountability. Among the various stakeholders, superiors and the higher level government departments and officials were regarded as the most important audience. Finally a set of five propositions was proposed as a way to capture succinctly the major features of the role of the principalship in China. / The context within which the research was conducted was one full of uncertainty and constant change. As a result of systemic and sustained reform efforts to restructure education, principals are caught between the often contradictory forces generated by educational imperatives, market forces, political hegemony and managerial complexity. It would be naive to believe that Mainland China is immune to the universalising tendency of educational reform. However, without careful study we are unsure whether Chinese principals are faced with similar dilemmas, paradoxes, and difficulties as their Western counterparts. There is thus a need to conduct more contextually sensitive research to unveil the intricacies of the role played by Chinese principals in the change context and to delve into the meanings they attach to their work. / The research findings were integrated into a framework comprised of three major categories, namely, stage, unwritten libretto and performance. The school constituted the most important stage that enabled and constrained their principalship. School status was found to be the most important influence in that it framed the role set within which each principal was situated. Despite the influence exerted by each principal's immediate context, a number of commoalities were identified when the eleven cases were pulled together. These common issues, defined as unwritten libretto in the study, included maintaining guanxi with the government, ensuring internal harmony within the organisation and the need to win resources. The knowledge of these rules was found to be indispensible to a principal in China and formed the instinctive grounds upon which they based their actions. Influenced by both the stage---where they were, and the unwritten libretto---their knowledge about how to be a principal in China, principal performance varied. An initial typology was constructed comprised of four types of principals. These types were Leading Actors, Supporting Actors, Opportunists and Marginal Actors. / The research has implications for the knowledge base of school principalship. It stretches this base beyond its current near-exclusive grounding in Western theory and provides some empirical understandings about the principalship in China. The development of a list of propositions also serves as a starting point to explicate the meanings of 'leadership' in the context of Chinese schools. The research findings also have substantial implications for principal development in China. Some suggestions are provided for program providers that may help to make the development programs more effective. / This study investigates how Chinese school principals perceive and enact their roles. Given that there is a conceptual crevice in our understanding of the Chinese principalship, the study intends to add a much needed dimension to the Anglo-American dominant leadership discourse. / Qian, Haiyan. / Adviser: Allan Walker. / Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 71-01, Section: A, page: 0045. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2009. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 244-258). / Electronic reproduction. Hong Kong : Chinese University of Hong Kong, [2012] System requirements: Adobe Acrobat Reader. Available via World Wide Web. / Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, MI : ProQuest Information and Learning Company, [200-] System requirements: Adobe Acrobat Reader. Available via World Wide Web. / Abstracts in English and Chinese.
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Public desires, private subjects: lalas in Shanghai. / Lalas in Shanghai / CUHK electronic theses & dissertations collectionJanuary 2009 (has links)
In this research, face-to-face in-depth interviews and extensive participant observations were conducted. There are twenty-five major informants, aged from early 20s to mid 40s, and a small number of supplementary ones. They were either Shanghai residents or were active in the city's lala communities. / In this thesis, I will look into the conflict between public inauguration and the private dilemma of lalas in contemporary urban China and the strategies they employed to cope with this conflict. Also, I will theorize lalas' existences in both ideological public and private domains, and the implication of the dominant community politics of "public correctness" to their symbolic existence and survival. / Since the economic reform period (1978 onwards), Shanghai has become one of the most vibrant sites of lala (the local identity for women with same-sex desires) communities in China. During my field visits from 2005 to 2007, I interviewed twenty-five self-identified lalas in Shanghai. One recurring theme that always came up in the interviews is the conflicts between the informants' desire to have same-sex relationship and the familial expectation of them to get married, or for those who have married, the pressure to maintain the heterosexual family. / The newly acquired economic freedom and geographical mobility in the reform era do not automatically translate into a breakaway from family control. The existence of rapidly developing and widely accessible tongzhi communities in both online and offline spaces, together with a paradigmatic change of the official treatment of homosexual subjects in the legal and medical domains, and the increasingly visible and organized involvements of state experts in the new normalization project of the homosexual population in the country, the exposure and discussion of homosexuality and its subjects have never been so public (in spatial and ideological senses) and diverse as compared to the past decades. Homosexual desire is going more and more public, yet the majority of homosexual population remains to be closeted subjects who are forced to keep their desires and presence as invisible as possible in non-public contexts such as family and more specifically, the heterosexual home space. / Kam, Yip Lo Lucetta. / Advisers: Kit Wai Eric Ma; Hon Ming Yip. / Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 70-09, Section: A, page: . / Thesis submitted in: December 2008. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2009. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 200-214). / Electronic reproduction. Hong Kong : Chinese University of Hong Kong, [2012] System requirements: Adobe Acrobat Reader. Available via World Wide Web. / Electronic reproduction. [Ann Arbor, MI] : ProQuest Information and Learning, [200-] System requirements: Adobe Acrobat Reader. Available via World Wide Web. / Abstracts in English and Chinese. / School code: 1307.
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Market efficiency research on Shanghai stock market.January 2002 (has links)
by Mi Jia, Wang Xueyu. / Thesis (M.B.A.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2002. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 77-78). / ABSTRACT --- p.III / TABLE OF CONTENTS --- p.iv / LIST OF TABLES AND FIGURES --- p.vi / Chapters / INTRODUCTION --- p.1 / DATA AND RESEARCH METHODOLOGY --- p.6 / EFFICIENCY TESTS --- p.12 / Time Serial Correlation Analysis --- p.12 / Seasonal Fluctuation --- p.16 / General Index's analysis and comparison --- p.17 / Holiday Effect --- p.20 / Test of Predictability in Stock Market Returns --- p.35 / Larger Stock in June effect --- p.37 / Passive Vs Active portfolio (with technical analysis) --- p.39 / Technical analysis --- p.40 / Filter Rules Approach Testing --- p.43 / Returns over Short and Long Horizons --- p.49 / Holding Period Return over Short and Long Horizons --- p.50 / Accumulative Abnormal Return over Short and Long Horizons --- p.51 / Mutual Fund Performance --- p.52 / Mutual Fund vs. Index --- p.53 / Relative Performance among Mutual Funds --- p.54 / "B/M, Size, and P/E Effect" --- p.55 / "Correlation among B/M, Assets, Market Value of A Share, P/E and Beta" --- p.56 / B/M and Annual Return --- p.57 / P/E and Annual Return --- p.59 / Assets and annual return --- p.60 / Market Value of A Share and Annual Return --- p.61 / Beta and Annual Return --- p.53 / Multiple Regressions --- p.64 / CONCLUSION --- p.66 / Limitation of Research --- p.66 / Summary --- p.67 / APPENDIX 1 --- p.69 / APPENDIX 2 --- p.70 / APPENDIX 3 --- p.71 / APPENDIX 4 --- p.72 / APPENDIX 5 --- p.73 / BIBLIOGRAPHY --- p.77
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Working as a maid in Shanghai: a comparative study of the lives and employment of Chinese and Filipina domestic helpers.January 2010 (has links)
Chen, Yingjun. / Thesis (M.Phil.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2010. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 204-207). / Abstracts in English and Chinese. / Abstract --- p.i / Acknowledgements --- p.iii / Chapter 1 --- Introduction --- p.1 / Statement of problem --- p.1 / Literature review --- p.3 / Methodology --- p.14 / The structure of the thesis --- p.19 / Chapter 2 --- Domestic Service Market in Shanghai --- p.21 / Two operating systems --- p.21 / An unregulated market --- p.24 / Conflicts between agencies and maids --- p.29 / From the local to foreign domestic service market --- p.37 / Chapter 3 --- Chinese Maids in Shanghai: A Personal Profile --- p.47 / "Salary, days off and live-in/out" --- p.47 / Who are they and why did they come to Shanghai to work as maids? --- p.50 / Coming and leaving: Two stories --- p.55 / Living in Shanghai --- p.59 / Conflicts among maids --- p.65 / What value do maids place on their job? --- p.68 / Future plans --- p.71 / Chapter 4 --- "Chinese Maids: The Explicit, the Implicit and the Unsaid in the Pre-Job Phase" --- p.75 / Unspoken rules of being a proper maid --- p.75 / Factors affecting hiring a maid --- p.82 / Factors affecting accepting a job --- p.93 / Chapter 5 --- The Chinese Maid-Employer Relationship: Conflicts and Resistance --- p.102 / Conflicts with employers --- p.102 / Resistance --- p.128 / Chapter 6 --- Filipina Maids in Shanghai: A Personal Profile --- p.134 / Where do Filipina maids work in Shanghai? --- p.134 / Who are these Filipina maids and who are their employers? --- p.136 / Legal status --- p.138 / Why did Filipinas come to China to work as maids? --- p.141 / Living in Shanghai --- p.146 / About Grace --- p.152 / Future plans --- p.155 / Maids´ة dual identities in Shanghai --- p.156 / Chapter 7 --- The Employment of Filipina Maids and the Employer-Filipina Maid Relationship --- p.162 / Reasons for hiring Filipina maids --- p.162 / Problems with employers --- p.174 / Chapter 8 --- Pulling the Strands Together: Power Relationships --- p.190 / Power is the core --- p.190 / The causes --- p.193 / The consequence --- p.199 / A visual depiction of the relationship and its causes --- p.202 / Bibliography --- p.204
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Living and loving: adaptive experiences of caregiving to a spouse with Alzheimer's disease in Shanghai, ChinaZhao, Huan, 赵环 January 2012 (has links)
This qualitative study is an attempt to explore the adaptive experiences of elderly Chinese caregivers who have to take care of their spousal partners who are suffering from Alzheimer’s disease (AD). As the illness is known to be chronic and degenerative in nature, caregivers are thus faced with many stressful situations and adjustments are necessary. The purpose of this study is to examine how these caregivers in AD situations are interpreting the factors that might have influenced their adjustments.
The sample consists of 26 participants aged 60 and above that have been a primary caregiver for not less than a year. Three in-depth interviews were conducted with each participant during the study period, which lasted for about two years. Findings show that most of them had to adjust to stressful situations in various aspects of life. They also developed many strategies for life adaption, which can be summarized in the following six adjustment themes.
First, after hearing the AD diagnosis, they initially experienced a series of shocks and false hopes, and subsequent adjustments include eliminating uncertainty, establishing reasonable expectations toward both the disease and treatment, learning to take on the caregiver role, and finally, separating the disease from their partner’s personality.
Second, these elderly caregivers gradually learned to attain inner peace through converting to various religions, searching for meanings within their stressful situations, and reconstructing rational explanations for their negative emotions.
Third, in the area of spousal interaction, adaptive strategies included staying connected with their sick partners, reinforcing their caregiving motivations, completing the “familiar-strange-familiar” cycle, and re-establishing daily routines.
Fourth, in situations involving other family members, such as adult children, the adjustment strategies included sharing economic burdens, re-allocating housework chores, delegating care responsibilities, and emotionally supporting one another.
Fifth, in terms of social network, the main support that caregivers received usually came from informal sources; formal support is extremely limited. Findings further show a connection between the input and output of social support and personal capacity.
Sixth, elderly spousal caregivers often possessed the ability to re-position and re-construct their self-confidence while adjusting to their new life rhythm. They were also able to achieve a balance between their private lives and their care responsibilities, which helps to maintain their well-being and neutralize their distresses.
In summary, participants of the study often utilized more than one strategy in adjusting to their situations. The six aspects of adjustments are thus put together in this study as an integrated model of life adaptation and survival tactics adopted by elderly Chinese AD spousal caregivers. Also, whether these caregivers are successful in adapting depends on their abilities to accept changes in themselves and their environment, and achieve a compromise between the two.
Based on the above findings, a culturally sensitive perspective is thus put forward to enhance the understanding of studied phenomenon within the contemporary Chinese context. Recommendations are also made regarding the needed policy changes and the revisions of social work practices in support of the elderly suffering from AD and their caregiving spouses. / published_or_final_version / Social Work and Social Administration / Doctoral / Doctor of Philosophy
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(Re)production of Shanghai's "Lilong" space : from historical and social conception to cultural and cognitive perceptionChan, Chun-kwok, 陳振國 January 2014 (has links)
Urban conservation (or heritage conservation in the urban setting), by its nature, imposes irreversible and enduring impacts on the built environment and urban fabrics. While conservation of individual monuments of indisputable historic and cultural significance often ignites heated debates, protests and resistance movements, the episodic conservation efforts of everyday architectures and heritage assets woven in the urban setting are often overlooked. Evidently within the rapidly changing context of urban China, which is virtually a contested ground for the struggles of many marginalized social groups and the upholding of local values and lived experiences amid the globalization waves and economic development, the urban conservation practice has not been systematically evaluated, monitored nor reviewed from an integrated perspective.
This fittingly calls for the utility of French philosopher Henri Lefebvre’s triadic “conceived – perceived – lived” spatial framework, which has been proven useful in discerning the spatial changes and power interplays embedded in the process and outcome of the production and re-production of space. As suggested in the title, the application of the Lefebvrian spatial framework in this research endeavor is manifold, in both spatial and temporal senses: First, to discern how the concerned space was historically produced; Then, to examine how the space has been re-produced (as in produced for the second time) in the conservation processes and outcomes; At the same time, to paradoxically explore whether and how the space has been reproduced (as in organically and biologically conceived, given birth and nurtured) to perpetuate for a sustainable future; Ultimately, to investigate how urban conservation efforts can possibly facilitate or impact on the preservation, integration and transformation of space from a physical construct to a mental construct in the urban restructuring processes across China today.
To this end, two fundamentally different yet very telling case study sites of urban conservation in Shanghai, the forefront city of China, have been identified, namely, Xintiandi and Tianzifang. They represent the market-driven conservation approach and the community-initiated conservation approach respectively, and both have deep-rooted causal relationships with the economic and developmental boom and evolution of urban conservation practice in Shanghai, and China as a whole.
Through a comparative analysis of the two case studies, this research endeavor examines, individually and collectively, what the driving forces and the evolving relationships of the key players are behind the conservation efforts, and whose interests have been represented in the conservation processes, whether the lived environments, routines and experiences have been identified, respected and conserved; thereby summarizing the salient issues facing urban conservation efforts in China today, and reflecting upon how urban conservation practice can contribute to the sustainability of urban development and redevelopment in Chinese cities and beyond. / published_or_final_version / Urban Planning and Design / Doctoral / Doctor of Philosophy
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Infrastructure and development : a comparison of the ports of Shanghai and MumbaiGill, Davinder Kaur January 2011 (has links)
No description available.
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High-rise housing development in Shanghai since 1972Bao, Haiyu, 1971- January 2000 (has links)
The past three decades have been a time of intensive development for high-rise housing in Shanghai. It has grown from an experimental prototype to the city's predominant form of housing. In this thesis, three periods in the developmental progress of Shanghai's high-rise housing will be examined, beginning in 1972. The interrelationships between the specific socioeconomic contexts, building codes, and design strategies are explored sequentially, and twelve typical high-rise housing projects are discussed, in an effort to trace the evolution of high-rise housing design strategies. / The study focuses primarily on three aspects of high-rise housing design: site organization, building design and unit layout. Responses to socio-economic transformation and building code regulations related to architectural design strategies are explored from the macro to the micro level. The experiences and lessons learned from previous works are reviewed, as well as suggestions for improving the performance of future projects, through approaches to architectural design and building-code adjustments.
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The retail distribution strategy for Hongkong Bank /Cheng, Ka-yee. January 1993 (has links)
Thesis (M.B.A.)--University of Hong Kong, 1993.
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