In Conversation Podcast
1) In Conversation with Fernando Cheung
STEPHEN DAVIES: “The myth of Hong Kong is the hardscrabble person who began life in a squatter hut and has made it to a senior civil servant level or a comfortable boss of an SME, or runs a restaurant...Show More
2) In Conversation with Fernando Cheung
STEPHEN DAVIES: “The myth of Hong Kong is the hardscrabble person who began life in a squatter hut and has made it to a senior civil servant level or a comfortable boss of an SME, or runs a restaurant...Show More
3) In Conversation with Johnson Chang
"It’s always the looking backwards as well as the looking forwards that makes human beings sane and social, and makes life liveable. We talk about the advance in science and technology, we talk about ...Show More
4) In Conversation with Johnson Chang
"It’s always the looking backwards as well as the looking forwards that makes human beings sane and social, and makes life liveable. We talk about the advance in science and technology, we talk about ...Show More
5) In Conversation with David Webb
STEPHEN DAVIES: “Do you think the functional constituency idea, as it’s been implemented in Hong Kong, is in principle okay, or do you think, like many thoughtful people, the functional constituencies...Show More
6) In Conversation with David Webb
STEPHEN DAVIES: “Do you think the functional constituency idea, as it’s been implemented in Hong Kong, is in principle okay, or do you think, like many thoughtful people, the functional constituencies...Show More
7) In Conversation with Elizabeth Sinn
"For the moment, for contemporary purposes, we really need archives for governments to be accountable. So that’s one thing. But as a historian who loves archives, I mean, can you imagine that 20 years...Show More
8) In Conversation with Elizabeth Sinn
"For the moment, for contemporary purposes, we really need archives for governments to be accountable. So that’s one thing. But as a historian who loves archives, I mean, can you imagine that 20 years...Show More
9) In Conversation with Miguel de Senna Fernandes
"The Macanese community were identified as Eurasians, Catholics, but then this notion was diluted in time. Nowadays, the Macanese themselves, they don’t know: “What the hell am I?” They keep asking th...Show More
10) In Conversation with Miguel de Senna Fernandes
"The Macanese community were identified as Eurasians, Catholics, but then this notion was diluted in time. Nowadays, the Macanese themselves, they don’t know: “What the hell am I?” They keep asking th...Show More