The following information was released to the press this past weekend. Excerpts were reported in various newspapers. You may have seen some of this, but here is the whole thing.
Hong Kong Youth Association Survey Questionnaire.
Gender
1. Male
2. Female
Age
1. 18-24
2. 25-30
3. 31-35
Highest Educational Level
1. Third-year middle-school or less
2. Fifth-year middle-school or university preparatory
3. University or higher
Occupation
1. Student
2. Professional/Manager
3. Clerical, technical, service
4. Administrator
5. Housewife
6. Unemployed
7. Self-employed/other
Q1. Have you been paying attention to the news reports and information about the demolition/relocation of Queen's Pier?
1. Yes
2. No
3. Not aware of this matter [skip to Q7]
Q2. In order to better traffic conditions around Central as well as carry out future development plans, the government wants to demolish/displace Queen's Pier. With respect to this policy, do you ...
1. Agree
2. Disagree
3. Don't know/Not Sure
Q3. The government spent seven years of consultation before legislating the plan for developing Central. Do you think that the process was ...
1. Appropriate
2. Inappropriate
3. Don't know/Not Sure
Q4. With respect to Secretary of Development Carrie Lam Yuet-Ngor's dialogue with the opponents of the demolition/relocation on July 29, you ...
1. Strongly approve
2. Approve
3. Neither approve nor disapprove
4. Disapprove
5. Strongly disapprove
Q5. Certain preservationists oppose the demolition/relocation of Queen's Pier in the name of collective memory. Do you ...
1. Agree
2. Disagree
3. Don't Know/Not Sure
Q6. With respect to the opponents of demolition/relocation staying at Queen's Pier and conducting a hunger strike, you ...
1. Disapprove a lot
2. Disapprove
3. Neither approve nor disapprove
4. Approve
5. Approve a lot
Q7. Personally speaking, do you consider the Queen's Pier to be a cultural heritage site?
1. Yes
2. No
3. Don't Know/Not Sure
Q8. The government wants to follow the Murray House case to disassemble Queen's Pier and re-assemble it at another location. Do you agree?
1. Agree a lot
2. Agree
3. Disagree
4. Disagree a lot
Q9. Personally speaking, do you think whether the preservation of Queen's Pier would affect the development plan for Central?
1. Agree
2. Disagree
3. Don't Know/Not Sure
Q10. Personally speaking, when cultural heritage is incompatible with development, which would you choose?
1. Development first
2. Preservation first
3. Don't Know/Not Sure
Q11. Generally speaking, do you think that the government has done enough in its publicity about the balance between preservation and urban development?
1. Enough
2. So so
3. No enough
4. Don't Know/Not Sure
Sampling Methodology
Date: August 1 to August 9, 2007
Locations: Eighteen districts in Hong Kong, Kowloon and New Territories
Methodology: The questionnaires were distributed and the respondents filled out the questionnaires themselves. The researchers were responsible only for distributing and collecting the questionnaires.
Survey Universe: Chinese citizens between the ages of 18 to 45 living in Hong Kong [note: yes, the description is 18 to 45 when the questionnaire only allows for 18 to 35 on the age question].
Sample Size: 570 questionnaires were distributed [note: there is no explanation as to whom] and 521 were collected (at 91.4% return rate). 21 of the questionnaires were excluded either because there was no response to one or more question, or more than one answer was checked for some question. The number of valid intab questionnaires is 500.
Survey Results
92% of young people paid attention to the news reports or information about the demolition/relocation of Queen's Pier.
59% of young people agreed with the SAR government's decision to demolish/displace Queen's Pier in order to improve traffic conditions around Central and carry out future development plans.
55% of young people think that it was appropriate for the government to hold seven years of consultation and then put the Central development plan into legislation. 29% of young people were not aware of the consultation process.
29% of young people approve/strongly approve the dialogue of Carrie Lam with the opponents of demolition/relocation at the July 29 forum; 34% neither approve nor disapprove her performance; 11% disapprove/strongly disapprove her performance.
52% of the young people disagree with opposing the demolition/relocation of Queen's Pier on the grounds of collective memory; 32% agree.
52% of the interviewees disagree with the actions of the opponents of the demolition/relocation of Queen's Pier in staying at the location and holding a hunger strike; 10% agreed/agreed a lot with their actions.
48% of the interviewees thought that Queen's Pier was a cultural heritage site, and 39% of them did not think so. 13% don't know.
53% of young people agreed/agreed a lot to dissemble Queen's Pier and re-assemble it elsewhere. 36% disagreed/disagreed a lot.
64% of the interviewees disagreed with the preservation of Queen's Pier such that the Central development plan is affected. Only 17% agreed.
50% of young people chose development ahead of preservation of cultural heritage sites, while 24% chose preservation first. 26% had no opinion.
48% of interviewees thought that the SAR government was inadequate in their publicity about the balance between preservation and urban development. Only 6% thought that they were adequate.
Analytical Summary
The analysis of the dataset showed that in the battle between the SAR government and the preservationists, the government acted properly during the consultation and legislation and therefore received the support of the majority of the interviewees.
Although 48% of the interviewees believed that the Queen's Pier was a cultural heritage site, there were three different outcomes:
(1) When asked whether they oppose the demolition/relocation of Queen's Pier on the grounds of collective memory, 52% disagreed
(2) Only 10% approve the actions of the opponents of the demolition/relocation of Queen's Pier in staying at the pier and holding a hunger strike.
(3) 64% disagreed with the disrupting the Central development plan in order to preserve Queen's Pier. Only 17% agreed.
The above data show that when forced to choose between development and preservation, 50% think that development goes first and only 24% think that preservation goes first. The data showed the present values with respect to tradeoff between preservation and development. This is vastly different from the preservationists' view that the government was going its own way against public opinion.
The disassembly of a cultural heritage site in order to re-assemble it elsewhere is a good way that is accepted by 54% of the interviewees. The case of Murray House is a successful example.
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來自東南西北:
http://www.zonaeuropa.com/20070814_1.htm
文章過長,這是訪問的原文。