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A Magistrate's Court in Nineteenth Century Hong Kong: Court in Time
 
 
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A Magistrate's Court in Nineteenth Century Hong Kong: Court in Time [Paperback]

Verner Bickley (Author), Christopher Coghlan (Author), Timothy Hamlett (Author), Geoffrey Roper (Author), Garry Tallentire (Author), Sir T. L. Yang (Author), Gillian Bickley (Author, Editor)


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Book Description

June 16, 2005

Selected, edited court cases, transcribed from a nineteenth century newspaper. These are grouped with historical introductions according to those appearing in court -- sailors, soldiers, police, teachers, priests, prostitutes, kidnappers & traffickers in human beings, children, students, gamblers, informers, pirates -- and who were charged with a wide range of offences.

Modern professionals comment on these cases from their related professional experience. A historian of nineteenth century Hong Kong contributes background essays on early Hong Kong and early Hong Kong law.

The Honourable Frederick Stewart (1836-1889), MA, LLD, Founder of Hong Kong Government Education and Head of the Permanent Hong Kong Civil Service, was also a Hong Kong Police Magistrate. His work in education was greatly admired. His work on the bench was also frequently approved by his contemporaries and this gives an understanding of how some English-speaking people in colonial Hong Kong thought in the latter part of the nineteenth century.

Education was one means for colonial administrators to provide future adult citizens with an understanding of what they expected of them. But most of those who attended school in nineteenth century Hong Kong did not attend colonial, but traditional confucian schools; and most residents among this highly transient population had little formal education of any kind. The Police Magistrate's court was another place where some might learn what was and was not accepted, after some brush with the law.

The newspaper reports of Stewart's court cases give a unique picture of colonial society. They show sailors, soldiers, policemen, teachers, clergymen and priests, wives and husbands, parents and children, servants and scamps, prostitutes and their clients, kidnappers, traffickers in human beings, children and students, gamblers and informers. They give an image of urban and country life and life at sea.

The cases reveal the rough edges of the interface between local and western cultures, as well as within the various cultural groups in multi-cultural Hong Kong. But, particularly through the demeanour of magistrate Frederick Stewart himself, they also show sincere attempts to live in a neighbourly manner, to respect and learn from others, and to work hard to create an improved society; a society where all might live safe and fulfilling lives, whether cocooned within their mother culture, or mingling and merging within the other various groups forming Hong Kong society.

Six writers from very different professional backgrounds offer insights into this world. Verner Bickley, cross-cultural scholar and socio-linguist, former University Professor and former colonial education administrator, writes on differing perceptions of social reality in Dr Stewart's court. Christopher Coghlan, a Hong Kong barrister, offers thoughts about the practice of law in Hong Kong. Tim Hamlett, previously a working journalist, now a University Professor of Journalism, considers reporting the cases of Frederick Stewart. Geoffrey Roper, a retired Assistant Commissioner of the Hong Kong Police Force, analyses the police role in magistrate Frederick Stewart's court. Hong Kong magistrate, Garry Tallentire, compares the Hong Kong (Police) Magistrate of the 1880s and the 1990s. Gillian Bickley, Frederick Stewart's biographer, considers what sort of magistrate Frederick Stewart was and takes a new look at the notorious Hong Kong "Light and Pass" Rules.

In his Preface, former Hong Kong Chief Justice, Sir T. L. Yang, gives a broadly historical perspective on the western legal system in Hong Kong.

A source book for data and analysis from the perspective of various disciplines, with much interesting reading.


Editorial Reviews

Review

Court in Time will undoubtedly be of interest to the student of Hong Kong history but because it gives a tightly bound and easily absorbable snapshot of the workings of an imposed set of legal and societal values in a foreign setting, the book also has a wider application. --Peter Gordon, The Asian Review of Books; & Weekend Standard.

Lawyers (whether solicitors, barristers, prosecutors or otherwise) may find the book a good reminder that all we say and how we behave at court today . . . will surely be researched and collated by future scholars. --Iu Ting Kwok, Solicitor, Hong Kong Lawyer.

[The] lengthy introduction … is a masterly and impartial survey. --Bradley Winterton, Taipei Times.

About the Author

Gillian Bickley, now an Honorary Research Fellow at the Centre of Asian Studies, University of Hong Kong, is the writer/editor of several books on nineteenth century Hong Kong, including The Golden Needle: The Biography of Frederick Stewart. She has taught at the University of Lagos, Nigeria, the University of Auckland, New Zealand, and the University of Hong Kong, and has recently completed twenty-two years at Hong Kong Baptist University.

Verner Bickley, cross-cultural scholar and socio-linguist, now an Honorary Research Fellow at the Centre of Asian Studies, University of Hong Kong and Chairman of the English Speaking Union (Hong Kong) was formerly a university professor and director of the Culture Learning Institute of the East West Centre in Honolulu, Hawai'i, and most recently, a colonial education administrator in Hong Kong. He is the author of more than twenty textbooks and articles on international education, language and culture.

Christopher Coghlan, born in Karachi (then in India), was a Crown Counsel in the Attorney General's Chambers in Hong Kong from 1986-1994, and has practised at the private bar in Hong Kong from 1996.

Timothy Hamlett has had varied experience of newspaper and media work in England and Hong Kong and is now a university professor of Journalism in Hong Kong. Geoffrey Roper is a retired Assistant Commissioner of the Hong Kong Police Force.

Garry Tallentire arrived in Hong Kong in 1988, was appointed Principal Magistrate in 1997, and has from time to time acted as a District Court Judge. Gillian Bickley, now an Honorary Research Fellow at the Centre of Asian Studies, University of Hong Kong, is Frederick Stewart's biographer and author/editor of several books and other works on 19th Century Hong Kong.

Sir T. L. Yang was formerly Chief Justice of Hong Kong.


Product Details

  • Paperback: 531 pages
  • Publisher: Proverse Hong Kong; 1st edition (June 16, 2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 9628557041
  • ISBN-13: 978-9628557042
  • Product Dimensions: 8.8 x 6 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.7 pounds
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #6,963,516 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Gillian Bickley (née Workman), born and educated in the United Kingdom, has lived mostly in Hong Kong since 1970. Her books include "China Suite and other Poems" (2009), "Sightings: a collection of Poetry" (2007), "Moving House and other Poems from Hong Kong" (2005) and "For the Record and other Poems of Hong Kong" (2003), the latter two now translated into Chinese. She is the Author of "The Stewarts of Bourtreebush" (2003) and "The Golden Needle: The Biography of Frederick Stewart (1836-1889)" (1997), and Editor of "The Complete Court Cases of Magistrate Frederick Stewart" (2008), "A Magistrate's Court in Nineteenth Century Hong Kong: Court in Time" (2005; 2nd edition, 2009), "The Development of Education in Hong Kong, 1841-1897" (2002) and "Hong Kong Invaded! A '97 Nightmare" (2001). Her poetry has been anthologised in Hong Kong, the Philippines and the United Kingdom. Individual poems have been translated into several languages. She was Senior Lecturer / Associate Professor in the Department of English Language and Literature at the Hong Kong Baptist University for twenty-two years. She has also held academic positions at the University of Lagos (Nigeria), Auckland (New Zealand) and the University of Hong Kong. She is now an Honorary Research Fellow at the Centre of Asian Studies, University of Hong Kong. With her husband, Verner Bickley, with whom she travels widely, she is co-founder of The Proverse Prize for unpublished non-fiction, fiction or poetry.
Gillian believes that writers need to go out to meet their readers and has given many talks and readings in academic institutions, to community groups and societies. Once or twice a year, basing her narrative on her work on nineteenth-century Hong Kong, she gives a Hong Kong Heritage Walk to a small group.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
police magistrate, ith hard labour, prisonm ent, ent tined, ith stealing, ran anded, ovemm ent, itw ould, oven ber, hinese residents, adm fitted, appointor ent, tew art, ong today, paw ned, perm fitted, arty court, oym ent, overnm ent, corn plainant, epartm ent, hew ould, punishm ent, stater ent, adm itted
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Hong Kong, The China, Frederick Stew, Police Constable, Cousth Tine, Police Force, Coust-h Tine, Police Station, Square Street, Chief Justice, Legislative Council, Caine Road, Captain Superintendent of Police, Frederick Stec, Hollywood Road, Executive Council, Colonial Office, Tank Lane, Governor John Pope, Registrar General, Police Training School, The Daily Press, Royal Tnniskilling Fusiliers, Governor Pope, Acting Police
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Front Cover | Table of Contents | First Pages | Index | Back Cover | Surprise Me!
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