Graduation Year

2025

Date of Submission

4-2025

Document Type

Open Access Senior Thesis

Degree Name

Bachelor of Arts

Department

Philosophy

Reader 1

Andrew Schroeder

Rights Information

© 2003 Bhanu Cheepurupalli

Abstract

I argue that Hong Kong maintains democratic deliberation through its innovation policy apparatus despite lacking traditional democratic processes. Using deliberative democratic theory and the concept of isegoria (speech of equals before equals), I demonstrate how Hong Kong's innovation governance sustains meaningful consensus outside conventional democratic frameworks.

My analysis shows that while Hong Kong lacks free elections, democratic deliberation persists through alternative channels within science and technology governance. Innovation policy functions as a vehicle for justice-advancing deliberation despite institutional constraints, as deliberative bodies operate within limited time, authority, and resources.

I trace how Hong Kong's innovation policy apparatus developed through the 1997 sovereignty transition, revealing how complex "wicked problems" created political space for consensus-building mechanisms that expanded state functions while maintaining market-oriented global governance norms. Hong Kong serves as a knowledge intermediary in supranational deliberation on innovation policy.

This case demonstrates democratic resilience through nontraditional deliberative devices, raising important questions about justice and isegoria in systems undergoing political transition.

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