AokiH (2021) Toward a critical understanding of the Japanese state and capitalism. Critical Sociology47(1): 5–15.
2.
ArrighiG (2009) Adam Smith in Beijing: Lineages of the 21st Century. London: Verso Books.
3.
AtzmüllerRAulenbacherBBrandU, et al. (eds) (2019) Capitalism in Transformation Movements and Counter-Movements in the 21st Century. Cheltenham: Edward Edgar.
4.
CheungGKW (2009) Hong Kong’s Watershed: The 1967 Riots,l vol.1. Pok Fu Lam, Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press.
5.
ChiuSWSiuKY (2022) Hong Kong as a city of protest: social movement as motor for social change. In: Hong Kong Society (ed.) Hong Kong Studies Reader Series. Singapore: Palgrave Macmillan, pp.329–385.
6.
FriedmanMFriedmanR (1990) Free to Choose: A Personal Statement. Boston, MA: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.
7.
GottfriedH (1991) Mechanisms of control in the temporary service industry. Sociological Forum6(4): 699–713.
8.
GottfriedH (2015) The Reproductive Bargain: Deciphering the Enigma of Japanese Capitalism. Leiden: Brill.
9.
HarveyD (2008) The right to the city. New Left Review23: 23–40.
10.
HughesR (1976) Borrowed Place, Borrowed Time: Hong Kong and Its Many Faces. London: Deutsch.
11.
KingAYC (1975) Administrative absorption of politics in Hong Kong: emphasis on the grass roots level. Asian Survey15(5): 422–439.
12.
LauSK (1984) Society and Politics in Hong Kong. Hong Kong, Hong Kong: Chinese University Press.
13.
LawWS (2009) Collaborative Colonial Power: The Making of the Hong Kong. Hong Kong, Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press.
14.
LeiYW (2021) Delivering solidarity: platform architecture and collective contention in China’s platform economy. American Sociological Review86(2): 279–309.
15.
LinC (2021) Revolution and Counterrevolution in China. London; New York: Verso Books.
16.
LuiTLChiuS (1993) Industrial restructuring and labour-market adjustment under positive noninterventionism: the case of Hong Kong. Environment and Planning A25(1): 63–79.
17.
O’ReillyJ (2022) Fractious connections. Presidential address at the SASE conference, Amsterdam, July 2022, Amsterdam: SASE.
18.
PeckJZhangJ (2013) A variety of capitalism . . . with Chinese characteristics?Journal of Economic Geography13(3): 357–396.
19.
PunNChenP (2022) Confronting global infrastructural capitalism: the triple logic of the ‘vanguard ‘and its inevitable spatial and class contradictions in China’s high-speed rail program. Cultural Studies. Epub ahead of print 11 April. DOI: 10.1080/09502386.2022.2056219.
20.
SilverB (2003) Forces of Labor: Worker’s Movements and Globalization since 1870. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
21.
SiuKJinS (2022) Hong Kong’s precarious young workers and contradictions of capital under authoritarian capitalism. Critical Sociology. Epub ahead of print 2 June. DOI: 10.1177/08969205221097907.
22.
SoAY (1999) Hong Kong’s Embattled Democracy: A Societal Analysis. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press.
23.
VallasSSchorJ (2020) What do platforms do? Understanding the gig economy. Annual Review of Sociology46: 273–294.
24.
WrightEO (2000) Working-class power, capitalist-class interests, and class compromise. American Journal of Sociology105(4): 957–1002.