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‘Global Britain’, the coloniality of migration, and the Hong Kong BN(O) visa

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNChapter

Forthcoming

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‘Global Britain’, the coloniality of migration, and the Hong Kong BN(O) visa. / Benson, Michaela.
Global Hong Kong: Post-2019 Migration and the New Hong Kong Diaspora. ed. / Yuk Wah Chan; Yvette To. London: Routledge, 2025. p. 19-38.

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNChapter

Harvard

Benson, M 2025, ‘Global Britain’, the coloniality of migration, and the Hong Kong BN(O) visa. in YW Chan & Y To (eds), Global Hong Kong: Post-2019 Migration and the New Hong Kong Diaspora. Routledge, London, pp. 19-38.

APA

Benson, M. (in press). ‘Global Britain’, the coloniality of migration, and the Hong Kong BN(O) visa. In Y. W. Chan, & Y. To (Eds.), Global Hong Kong: Post-2019 Migration and the New Hong Kong Diaspora (pp. 19-38). Routledge.

Vancouver

Benson M. ‘Global Britain’, the coloniality of migration, and the Hong Kong BN(O) visa. In Chan YW, To Y, editors, Global Hong Kong: Post-2019 Migration and the New Hong Kong Diaspora. London: Routledge. 2025. p. 19-38

Author

Benson, Michaela. / ‘Global Britain’, the coloniality of migration, and the Hong Kong BN(O) visa. Global Hong Kong: Post-2019 Migration and the New Hong Kong Diaspora. editor / Yuk Wah Chan ; Yvette To. London : Routledge, 2025. pp. 19-38

Bibtex

@inbook{ca4c7b461b314106bc8b44e65bb79816,
title = "{\textquoteleft}Global Britain{\textquoteright}, the coloniality of migration, and the Hong Kong BN(O) visa",
abstract = "In January 2021, the UK Government launched the Hong Kong British National (Overseas) visa, in this way offering humanitarian protections to its former colonial citizens. Introduced following the imposition of National Security Law (NSL) in Hong Kong SAR, the opening up of the visa route was part of a set of foreign policy measures spurred by (a) the UK Government{\textquoteright}s judgement that the Sino-British Joint Declaration had been breached and (b) protesting alleged human rights abuses in the People{\textquoteright}s Republic of China (PRC). Presented as delivering on a {\textquoteleft}moral obligation{\textquoteright} resulting from the historic relationship between the British state and the Hong Kongers, the visa offers both a route out of HKSAR and support for long-term settlement in the UK. In this chapter, I critically evaluate the visa through a theoretical and conceptual framework centred on the coloniality of migration and citizenship. I situate the visa in the longer history of Britain{\textquoteright}s bordering of the Hong Kongers, and in the context of the post-Brexit reframing of migration governance in the image of {\textquoteleft}Global Britain{\textquoteright}. This detailed examination reveals the imbrication of ideology, the politics of migration, and geopolitical interests in defining the contours of the post-Brexit migration regime.",
author = "Michaela Benson",
year = "2025",
month = mar,
day = "4",
language = "English",
isbn = "9781040324523",
pages = "19--38",
editor = "Chan, {Yuk Wah} and Yvette To",
booktitle = "Global Hong Kong",
publisher = "Routledge",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - ‘Global Britain’, the coloniality of migration, and the Hong Kong BN(O) visa

AU - Benson, Michaela

PY - 2025/3/4

Y1 - 2025/3/4

N2 - In January 2021, the UK Government launched the Hong Kong British National (Overseas) visa, in this way offering humanitarian protections to its former colonial citizens. Introduced following the imposition of National Security Law (NSL) in Hong Kong SAR, the opening up of the visa route was part of a set of foreign policy measures spurred by (a) the UK Government’s judgement that the Sino-British Joint Declaration had been breached and (b) protesting alleged human rights abuses in the People’s Republic of China (PRC). Presented as delivering on a ‘moral obligation’ resulting from the historic relationship between the British state and the Hong Kongers, the visa offers both a route out of HKSAR and support for long-term settlement in the UK. In this chapter, I critically evaluate the visa through a theoretical and conceptual framework centred on the coloniality of migration and citizenship. I situate the visa in the longer history of Britain’s bordering of the Hong Kongers, and in the context of the post-Brexit reframing of migration governance in the image of ‘Global Britain’. This detailed examination reveals the imbrication of ideology, the politics of migration, and geopolitical interests in defining the contours of the post-Brexit migration regime.

AB - In January 2021, the UK Government launched the Hong Kong British National (Overseas) visa, in this way offering humanitarian protections to its former colonial citizens. Introduced following the imposition of National Security Law (NSL) in Hong Kong SAR, the opening up of the visa route was part of a set of foreign policy measures spurred by (a) the UK Government’s judgement that the Sino-British Joint Declaration had been breached and (b) protesting alleged human rights abuses in the People’s Republic of China (PRC). Presented as delivering on a ‘moral obligation’ resulting from the historic relationship between the British state and the Hong Kongers, the visa offers both a route out of HKSAR and support for long-term settlement in the UK. In this chapter, I critically evaluate the visa through a theoretical and conceptual framework centred on the coloniality of migration and citizenship. I situate the visa in the longer history of Britain’s bordering of the Hong Kongers, and in the context of the post-Brexit reframing of migration governance in the image of ‘Global Britain’. This detailed examination reveals the imbrication of ideology, the politics of migration, and geopolitical interests in defining the contours of the post-Brexit migration regime.

M3 - Chapter

SN - 9781040324523

SP - 19

EP - 38

BT - Global Hong Kong

A2 - Chan, Yuk Wah

A2 - To, Yvette

PB - Routledge

CY - London

ER -