Hearts and minds in Hong Kong's new territories: agriculture and vegetable marketing in a Cold War borderland, circa 1946-1967

Using declassified colonial and British records in Hong Kong and London, as well as memoirs of former leftists and newspapers, this article explores the strategies the Hong Kong colonial government employed in a propaganda campaign to garner political support of the rural population in the New Terri...

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Main Authors: Ng, Michael, Mok, Florence, Wong, John, Wu, Wallace
Other Authors: School of Humanities
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/169358
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1693582023-07-14T07:02:53Z Hearts and minds in Hong Kong's new territories: agriculture and vegetable marketing in a Cold War borderland, circa 1946-1967 Ng, Michael Mok, Florence Wong, John Wu, Wallace School of Humanities Humanities::History Communism Cold War Using declassified colonial and British records in Hong Kong and London, as well as memoirs of former leftists and newspapers, this article explores the strategies the Hong Kong colonial government employed in a propaganda campaign to garner political support of the rural population in the New Territories, a porous land frontier during the Cold War. It also analyses the varying political orientations of migrant farmers, who often had received economic benefits from both the colonial government and the leftist organizations. This article reveals that the colonial government established the Vegetable Marketing Organization (VMO), a state-owned enterprise, to first nationalize the vegetable wholesale market in the immediate post-war period, and subsequently used it to combat increasing political influence and anti-government activities of the communist-controlled Society of Plantations. Despite the improvement of the livelihood of immigrant farmers, the VMO Scheme failed to out-compete the Society economically, which was ultimately eliminated by draconian measures. Through studying the agrarian politics and economic contestations in Hong Kong's rural area, this article provides a lens on how the Cold War was played out at a village level in East Asia. 2023-07-14T07:02:53Z 2023-07-14T07:02:53Z 2023 Journal Article Ng, M., Mok, F., Wong, J. & Wu, W. (2023). Hearts and minds in Hong Kong's new territories: agriculture and vegetable marketing in a Cold War borderland, circa 1946-1967. Modern Asian Studies. https://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0026749X22000610 0026-749X https://hdl.handle.net/10356/169358 10.1017/S0026749X22000610 2-s2.0-85162172466 en Modern Asian Studies © 2023 The Author(s). Published by Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Humanities::History
Communism
Cold War
spellingShingle Humanities::History
Communism
Cold War
Ng, Michael
Mok, Florence
Wong, John
Wu, Wallace
Hearts and minds in Hong Kong's new territories: agriculture and vegetable marketing in a Cold War borderland, circa 1946-1967
description Using declassified colonial and British records in Hong Kong and London, as well as memoirs of former leftists and newspapers, this article explores the strategies the Hong Kong colonial government employed in a propaganda campaign to garner political support of the rural population in the New Territories, a porous land frontier during the Cold War. It also analyses the varying political orientations of migrant farmers, who often had received economic benefits from both the colonial government and the leftist organizations. This article reveals that the colonial government established the Vegetable Marketing Organization (VMO), a state-owned enterprise, to first nationalize the vegetable wholesale market in the immediate post-war period, and subsequently used it to combat increasing political influence and anti-government activities of the communist-controlled Society of Plantations. Despite the improvement of the livelihood of immigrant farmers, the VMO Scheme failed to out-compete the Society economically, which was ultimately eliminated by draconian measures. Through studying the agrarian politics and economic contestations in Hong Kong's rural area, this article provides a lens on how the Cold War was played out at a village level in East Asia.
author2 School of Humanities
author_facet School of Humanities
Ng, Michael
Mok, Florence
Wong, John
Wu, Wallace
format Article
author Ng, Michael
Mok, Florence
Wong, John
Wu, Wallace
author_sort Ng, Michael
title Hearts and minds in Hong Kong's new territories: agriculture and vegetable marketing in a Cold War borderland, circa 1946-1967
title_short Hearts and minds in Hong Kong's new territories: agriculture and vegetable marketing in a Cold War borderland, circa 1946-1967
title_full Hearts and minds in Hong Kong's new territories: agriculture and vegetable marketing in a Cold War borderland, circa 1946-1967
title_fullStr Hearts and minds in Hong Kong's new territories: agriculture and vegetable marketing in a Cold War borderland, circa 1946-1967
title_full_unstemmed Hearts and minds in Hong Kong's new territories: agriculture and vegetable marketing in a Cold War borderland, circa 1946-1967
title_sort hearts and minds in hong kong's new territories: agriculture and vegetable marketing in a cold war borderland, circa 1946-1967
publishDate 2023
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/169358
_version_ 1772826861496172544