Hong Kong Baptist University – Department of Journalism was the first of its kind in Hong Kong when it was founded in 1968.
— Read on www.jour.hkbu.edu.hk/faculty-member/colin-sparks/
Open Society Foundation = George Soros
Hong Kong Baptist University, HK
In the course of my research, I have worked with and advised the European Union, Unesco, the Open Society Foundation, the Rockefeller Foundation, the British Council, Universities in the US, Europe and East Asia, and many other organisations, academic, official, and non-governmental. I have participated actively in the professional associations of the field, both nationally and internationally. I was one of the founders of Media, Culture and Society, and I continue to play an active role as managing editor, as well as editing issues on a regular basis. I was a founder of the European Institute for Communication and Culture. I have organised several of its colloquia, and edited themed issues of its journal Javnost/The Public. In 2004, I took the initiative to launch an open access journal Westminster Papers in Communication and Culture, on whose editorial board I serve. My current research interests include the comparative study of media systems undergoing rapid change. I am particularly interested in comparing the media systems of post-communist countries with those of other societies that have moved away from different forms of dictatorship towards more democratic forms of political rule. My other major current interest is in theories of media and communication.
RS21 – Revolutionary Socialism in the 21st Century
SCMP articles on HKBU protests in 2018.
HKBU to hire 100 of the ‘best and brightest’ professors
“According to Chin, the annual salary of an assistant professor is around HK$1.5 million, while more senior positions would pay HK$2 million to HK$3 million a year. Hiring 100 assistant professors, the lowest rank of staff the university would hire in this scheme, would cost the university at least HK$150 million, according to a Post estimate.”
HKBU President Roland Chin Tai-hong steps down