Hong Kong Public and Squatter Housing
Geopolitics and Informality, 1963–1985
Distributed for Hong Kong University Press
Hong Kong Public and Squatter Housing
Geopolitics and Informality, 1963–1985
In Hong Kong Public and Squatter Housing, Alan Smart and Fung Chi Keung Charles trace the development of squatting in Hong Kong from 1963 to 1985. The authors reconstruct government policy on squatting through both ethnographic and archival research. This book sheds new light on the consequences of various attempts to control encroachment on scarce urban space. The authors argue that intersecting policy agendas resulted in decisions that were often not desired, but which emerged as practical solutions from prior failures. They address the challenges of explaining confidential policy decisions and offer new approaches applicable in other contexts. Overall, this book makes an important contribution to the understanding of how public housing and squatting interacted in influential ways that have been poorly understood and offer new perspectives on the challenges of urban governance and housing problems.
340 pages | 17 halftones, 1 map, 2 tables | 6 x 9 | © 2023
Royal Asiatic Society Hong Kong Studies Series
History: General History
Political Science: Public Policy
Sociology: Urban and Rural Sociology

Table of Contents
List of Tables
Preface
Acknowledgments
Abbreviations
Map of Hong Kong in 1984
1. Introduction
2. Informality
3. Evaluating the Geopolitical Explanation
4. The Situation in the Early 1960s
5. Riots and Reforms
6. The Mangle of Policy Practice
7. Supply, Demand, and Failures
8. Hong Kong Identity and Squatter Exclusion
9. Squatter Area Improvement
10. The Squatter Occupancy Survey
11. Managing Squatting in Other Asian Cities
12. Conclusions
Notes
Bibliography
Index
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