Educational Disadvantage and University Entrance for Pakistani and Nepalese School Students in Hong Kong: The Possibilities of Legal Redress

This thesis focuses on how Pakistani and Nepalese school students in Hong Kong are educationally disadvantaged compared to local Chinese students by a combination of experiencing difficulties learning Chinese and the entrance policies of universities. The research was undertaken from a legal perspec...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Khattak, Shahmim Khan
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/64909/
_version_ 1848801190724239360
author Khattak, Shahmim Khan
author_facet Khattak, Shahmim Khan
author_sort Khattak, Shahmim Khan
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description This thesis focuses on how Pakistani and Nepalese school students in Hong Kong are educationally disadvantaged compared to local Chinese students by a combination of experiencing difficulties learning Chinese and the entrance policies of universities. The research was undertaken from a legal perspective to explore the possibilities of legal redress, which is one important way of addressing these inequalities. The research involved interviews with stakeholders, developing a comparative case study and, finally, exploring the legal case. Ethnic minority groups in Hong Kong account for 8 % of the total population. The Hong Kong Special Administrative Region Government is under an obligation to guarantee equal access to education to all students without discrimination. However, there is evidence from policy documents and scholarly literature that ethnic minority students are not supported to learn and qualify in Cantonese to a high enough level to afford them equal access to one of the nine prestigious JUPAS universities. The universities’ admissions procedures appear to be discriminatory by placing a high value on proficiency in Chinese, even when not necessary for university study. The thesis explores the policy and legal background to the problem and then takes three methodological approaches to taking the investigation further. First, to explore how those affected perceive and experience the problem, 16 interviews were undertaken with 8 students from ethnic minority groups, 6 principals and 2 teachers of schools with a large number of ethnic minority students. These interviews revealed that students do experience educational disadvantage in relation to university entrance, but that they are often unaware of it. Despite efforts, it was eventually too difficult to gain any responses from universities about their admission policies and procedures. Secondly, it compares the education system and policies of Hong Kong with Singapore which is composed of three major ethnic student groups. The comparison shows that the situation in Hong Kong is not inevitable: Singaporean government maintains greater equality and fairness between the groups than in Hong Kong. Thirdly, it undertakes a thorough legal analysis using precedents and cases. Taking all the evidence together, the thesis concludes by confirming that an aggrieved member of the ethnic minority students could seek legal redress or remedies against one of the nine universities under Judicial Review on the basis of the Race Discrimination Ordinance and/or any other statutes on constitutional laws or through any statutory bodies such as the Equal Opportunities Commission or the Legal Aid Department.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T21:03:31Z
format Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
id nottingham-64909
institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
institution_category Local University
language English
last_indexed 2025-11-14T21:03:31Z
publishDate 2025
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling nottingham-649092025-08-28T10:30:29Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/64909/ Educational Disadvantage and University Entrance for Pakistani and Nepalese School Students in Hong Kong: The Possibilities of Legal Redress Khattak, Shahmim Khan This thesis focuses on how Pakistani and Nepalese school students in Hong Kong are educationally disadvantaged compared to local Chinese students by a combination of experiencing difficulties learning Chinese and the entrance policies of universities. The research was undertaken from a legal perspective to explore the possibilities of legal redress, which is one important way of addressing these inequalities. The research involved interviews with stakeholders, developing a comparative case study and, finally, exploring the legal case. Ethnic minority groups in Hong Kong account for 8 % of the total population. The Hong Kong Special Administrative Region Government is under an obligation to guarantee equal access to education to all students without discrimination. However, there is evidence from policy documents and scholarly literature that ethnic minority students are not supported to learn and qualify in Cantonese to a high enough level to afford them equal access to one of the nine prestigious JUPAS universities. The universities’ admissions procedures appear to be discriminatory by placing a high value on proficiency in Chinese, even when not necessary for university study. The thesis explores the policy and legal background to the problem and then takes three methodological approaches to taking the investigation further. First, to explore how those affected perceive and experience the problem, 16 interviews were undertaken with 8 students from ethnic minority groups, 6 principals and 2 teachers of schools with a large number of ethnic minority students. These interviews revealed that students do experience educational disadvantage in relation to university entrance, but that they are often unaware of it. Despite efforts, it was eventually too difficult to gain any responses from universities about their admission policies and procedures. Secondly, it compares the education system and policies of Hong Kong with Singapore which is composed of three major ethnic student groups. The comparison shows that the situation in Hong Kong is not inevitable: Singaporean government maintains greater equality and fairness between the groups than in Hong Kong. Thirdly, it undertakes a thorough legal analysis using precedents and cases. Taking all the evidence together, the thesis concludes by confirming that an aggrieved member of the ethnic minority students could seek legal redress or remedies against one of the nine universities under Judicial Review on the basis of the Race Discrimination Ordinance and/or any other statutes on constitutional laws or through any statutory bodies such as the Equal Opportunities Commission or the Legal Aid Department. 2025-07-26 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en cc_by https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/64909/1/Educational%20Disadvantage%20and%20University%20Entrance%20for%20Pakistani%20and%20Nepalese%20School%20Students%20in%20Hong%20Kong-%20The%20Possibilities%20of%20Legal%20Redress%20.pdf Khattak, Shahmim Khan (2025) Educational Disadvantage and University Entrance for Pakistani and Nepalese School Students in Hong Kong: The Possibilities of Legal Redress. EdD thesis, University of Nottingham. Ethnic Minority Students in Hong Kong inequality in education
spellingShingle Ethnic Minority Students in Hong Kong
inequality in education
Khattak, Shahmim Khan
Educational Disadvantage and University Entrance for Pakistani and Nepalese School Students in Hong Kong: The Possibilities of Legal Redress
title Educational Disadvantage and University Entrance for Pakistani and Nepalese School Students in Hong Kong: The Possibilities of Legal Redress
title_full Educational Disadvantage and University Entrance for Pakistani and Nepalese School Students in Hong Kong: The Possibilities of Legal Redress
title_fullStr Educational Disadvantage and University Entrance for Pakistani and Nepalese School Students in Hong Kong: The Possibilities of Legal Redress
title_full_unstemmed Educational Disadvantage and University Entrance for Pakistani and Nepalese School Students in Hong Kong: The Possibilities of Legal Redress
title_short Educational Disadvantage and University Entrance for Pakistani and Nepalese School Students in Hong Kong: The Possibilities of Legal Redress
title_sort educational disadvantage and university entrance for pakistani and nepalese school students in hong kong: the possibilities of legal redress
topic Ethnic Minority Students in Hong Kong
inequality in education
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/64909/