A few decades ago, the Chinese authorities coined the »one country, two systems« term to signify a system where Taiwan would be united with Mainland China by being granted a status of a special administrative region with a high level of autonomy, its own legislative, executive and judicial power and its own army. This model was first introduced in Hong Kong, although, as it later turned out, the promised autonomy only existed on paper, since the model which was implemented in 1997 and was supposed to be valid for the next 50 years, today only exists in a much-diminished form. One of the strongest indicators of that is the mass protests that started in Hong Kong in 2019 and reached even the worldwide media. The protestors' demands for bigger autonomy, democracy, and the PRC government's abidance of the promises that were made when the model was first implemented, led to more interest in the political position of Hong Kong and the political model that PRC has implemented in the special administrative region. The PRC government in Beijing has been trying to implement this obsolete model in Taiwan as well, but without much success due to Taiwan's government's disagreement. Taiwanese authorities are aware that with the implementation of this »autonomous« model, Taiwan would still be a subject to the government in Beijing, which is deemed the only legitimate Chinese government. In this thesis, I shall therefore first describe the »one country, two systems« model, its historical background and its implementation in Hong Kong, where the discrepancy between the initial promises and the actual state of affairs is the most visible, and lastly discuss the implications which recent events that happened in Hong Kong had for Taiwan.
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