This article discusses the reasons and discourses adopted by the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region Government (Hong Kong SAR Government), with Mr Tung Chee Hwa as the Chief Executive, in preparing young people to become more mature and responsible. In the Hong Kong context this means they should be willing to fulfil community obligations and opt for consultation rather than confrontation should individual or community rights be sought. Confucianism, named after Confucius (551‐479 BCE), has been and still is a vast and complicated system of philosophies, morals, rituals, and ideas, which for well over 2,000 years has informed and inspired the thinking and practice of countless people in Chinese societies and Asian countries in all important areas, including the economy and the polity (Tu,1998a; Berthrong & Berthrong, 2000; Yao, 2002). Put simply, the goal of Confucian life is to create a peaceful world, with its ethical emphasis placed on the cultivation of the self and the promotion of harmonious and respectful relations with other people in different spheres of human activities.
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1 October 2005
Research Article|
October 01 2005
Towards a confucian notion of youth development in Hong Kong Available to Purchase
Victor Wong;
Victor Wong
Professor, Department of Social Work, Hong Kong Baptist University
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Sammy Chiu
Sammy Chiu
Professor, Department of Social Work, Hong Kong Baptist University
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 1758-6720
Print ISSN: 0144-333X
© Emerald Group Publishing Limited
2005
International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy (2005) 25 (10-11): 14–36.
Citation
Wong V, Chiu S (2005), "Towards a confucian notion of youth development in Hong Kong". International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy, Vol. 25 No. 10-11 pp. 14–36, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/01443330510791360
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