This paper examines how Macau, with a different political and legal system under the “one country, two systems” principle, fits into China’s securitization and what impact that has on its local governance. We argue that in recent years Macau’s legal system has gradually transformed into a means of social control. Through case files related to the Assembly and Demonstration Law drawn from the Court of Final Appeal, we demonstrate that although Macau is unlike Hong Kong, where dissidents are subject to severe repression, Beijing’s emphasis on national security has weakened the checks-and-balances function of Macau’s legal system and substantially narrowed the scope of freedom of speech, even though it is nominally guaranteed and protected by the Basic Law.
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July/August 2021
Research Article|
August 01 2021
A Securitized “One Country, Two Systems”?: Law as Social Control in Macau
Ieong Meng U,
Ieong Meng U
Ieong Meng U is Assistant Professor in the Department of Government and Public Administration, University of Macau. His research interest is comparative authoritarianism with specific regional interests in China, Hong Kong, and Macau. Email: <[email protected]>
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Wu Xiangning
Wu Xiangning
Wu Xiangning is Assistant Professor in the Department of Government and Public Administration, University of Macau. Her research interest is Asia Pacific regionalization and China–US relations. Email: <[email protected]>
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Asian Survey (2021) 61 (4): 663–682.
Citation
Ieong Meng U, Wu Xiangning; A Securitized “One Country, Two Systems”?: Law as Social Control in Macau. Asian Survey 1 August 2021; 61 (4): 663–682. doi: https://doi.org/10.1525/as.2021.61.4.663
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