HKDSE · Answers & Marking Scheme

2023 HKDSE History Answers & Marking Scheme

Thinka 2023 DSE-Style Mock — History

95 marks195 mins2023
An original Thinka practice paper modelled on the structure and difficulty of that year's HKDSE paper. Not affiliated with or reproduced from the HKEAA.

Paper 1 (Data-based Questions)

Choose any THREE questions from this paper. Each question consists of sub-questions assessing source comprehension, comparison, and synthesized historical evaluation.
12 Question · 60 marks
Question 1 · Short Answer
3 marks
Source A is an extract from a British newspaper article published in 1923 regarding the Corfu Incident: 'The League of Nations, though established with high hopes, stands by like a helpless spectator while Italy bullies Greece. Dictators care little for the moral preachings of Geneva when there is no sword to enforce them. The Great Powers continue to play their own games of diplomacy outside the League's assembly.' According to Source A, what was the author's attitude towards the effectiveness of the League of Nations? Support your answer with two clues from the source.

Answer

Attitude: Highly critical / pessimistic / skeptical. Clues: 1. The League is described as a 'helpless spectator' while Italy bullied Greece. 2. Dictators care little for its preachings because there is 'no sword to enforce them'.

Worked solution

Attitude (1 mark): The author holds a highly critical, negative, or skeptical attitude towards the effectiveness of the League of Nations. Clues (2 marks): 1) The author states that the League 'stands by like a helpless spectator while Italy bullies Greece', indicating its inability to protect weak nations. 2) The author notes that 'there is no sword to enforce' its moral preachings, showing that the League lacked real coercive power. 3) The author mentions that the 'Great Powers continue to play their own games of diplomacy outside the League's assembly', showing that major powers bypassed the League. (Any two clues for 1 mark each)

Marking scheme

Attitude: 1 mark for identifying a negative/critical attitude. (Reject positive/supportive). Clues: 1 mark for each valid clue cited and explained from the source, up to a maximum of 2 marks.
Question 2 · Short Answer
3 marks
Source B is adapted from a Japanese government decree on education in 1872: 'Henceforth, education shall be so diffused that there may not be a village with an ignorant family, nor a family with an ignorant member. Every person, regardless of class or gender, must acquire learning to improve their own station and contribute to the strength of the nation.' According to Source B, identify three characteristics of the educational reform during the early Meiji period.

Answer

Characteristics: 1. Universal coverage / mass education. 2. Egalitarianism (regardless of class or gender). 3. Nationalistic purpose (to contribute to national strength) / social mobility (improving individual station).

Worked solution

The three characteristics are: 1) Universal education / eradication of illiteracy, as it aims to have 'not a village with an ignorant family, nor a family with an ignorant member'. 2) Gender and class equality, as education is provided to 'every person, regardless of class or gender'. 3) Nationalistic goal combined with personal advancement, as learning is intended to 'improve their own station' and 'contribute to the strength of the nation'. (1 mark for each characteristic, total 3 marks)

Marking scheme

Award 1 mark for each distinct educational characteristic identified from the source, up to a maximum of 3 marks. Clues must be correctly paraphrased or quoted to support the characteristic.
Question 3 · Short Answer
3 marks
Source C is adapted from a speech by US President Truman in 1947: 'At the present moment in world history nearly every nation must choose between alternative ways of life. One way of life is based upon the will of the majority, and is distinguished by free institutions... The second way of life is based upon the will of a minority forcibly imposed upon the majority. It relies upon terror and oppression...' According to Source C, what was Truman's attitude towards the 'second way of life'? Support your answer with two clues from the source.

Answer

Attitude: Negative / hostile / condemnatory. Clues: 1. It is 'forcibly imposed' by a minority. 2. It 'relies upon terror and oppression'.

Worked solution

Attitude (1 mark): Truman holds an extremely hostile, negative, critical, or condemnatory attitude towards the 'second way of life' (communism). Clues (2 marks): 1) He describes it as being 'based upon the will of a minority forcibly imposed upon the majority', indicating its undemocratic nature. 2) He points out that 'it relies upon terror and oppression', highlighting its tyrannical and coercive nature. (1 mark for each clue)

Marking scheme

Attitude: 1 mark for hostile, negative, or critical. (Reject positive or neutral). Clues: 1 mark for each valid clue cited and explained from the source, up to 2 marks.
Question 4 · Short Answer
3 marks
Source D is adapted from a speech by Deng Xiaoping in 1979: 'We must allow some regions and some people to become prosperous first through hard work, so that they can lead and help other regions and people to gradually achieve common prosperity. We cannot return to the old path of egalitarianism which only led to shared poverty.' According to Source D, what was Deng Xiaoping's view on the economic development of China? Support your answer with two clues from the source.

Answer

View: Pragmatic / reformist / opposing absolute egalitarianism in favor of staggered progress towards prosperity. Clues: 1. Allowing 'some regions and some people to become prosperous first'. 2. Rejecting 'the old path of egalitarianism which only led to shared poverty'.

Worked solution

View (1 mark): Deng Xiaoping supports reform, pragmatism, and staggered economic growth where some get rich first to eventually achieve common prosperity, while strongly opposing absolute egalitarianism. Clues (2 marks): 1) He suggests allowing 'some regions and some people to become prosperous first' to eventually lead others to common prosperity. 2) He explicitly rejects the 'old path of egalitarianism', stating that it 'only led to shared poverty'. (1 mark for each clue)

Marking scheme

View: 1 mark for identifying a reformist, pragmatic, or anti-egalitarian perspective. Clues: 1 mark for each valid clue cited and explained from the source, up to 2 marks.
Question 5 · Explanation (Clue-based)
4 marks
Source A: An excerpt from a Japanese intellectual's journal in 1905: 'We wear Western-style suits, build modern steamships, and adopt their legal codes. Yet, the Western powers still treat us as an inferior race, refusing to grant us equal status in international treaties.' According to Source A, explain two clues that show Japan's mixed feelings of admiration and resentment towards the West.

Answer

Two clues: 1. Admiration is shown by Japan's active emulation of the West (wearing suits, building steamships, adopting laws). 2. Resentment is shown by their frustration over being treated as an inferior race and denied equal treaty status despite their modernization efforts.

Worked solution

Clue 1 (Admiration): The author mentions adopting Western suits, steamships, and legal codes. This reflects Japan's admiration of Western modernization and its active efforts to emulate Western material and institutional achievements. Clue 2 (Resentment): The author expresses frustration that Western powers still treat them as an 'inferior race' and deny them 'equal status'. This shows deep-seated resentment against Western racial discrimination and unequal treatment despite Japan's progress.

Marking scheme

Identify Clue 1 (Admiration) with reference to Source: 1 mark. Explain how it reflects admiration: 1 mark. Identify Clue 2 (Resentment) with reference to Source: 1 mark. Explain how it reflects resentment: 1 mark. (Total: 4 marks)
Question 6 · Comparison
4 marks
Source A: A British political cartoon from 1932 depicts the League of Nations as a 'paper tiger' unable to stop Japan's military actions in Manchuria. Source B: A speech by a French delegate in 1933 states, 'The League of Nations remains the sole global forum where peaceful arbitration can prevent minor frontier disputes from escalating into European wars.' Compare the views of the authors of Source A and Source B regarding the effectiveness of the League of Nations.

Answer

The authors hold contrasting views: Source A is highly pessimistic and views the League as ineffective in curbing major aggression, whereas Source B is more optimistic and views the League as effective and indispensable for resolving minor disputes.

Worked solution

Point of Comparison 1 (Effectiveness in stopping major aggression): The author of Source A views the League as completely ineffective ('paper tiger' failing to stop Japan's invasion), whereas the author of Source B views it as effective in preventing escalation, though focusing on 'minor frontier disputes'. Point of Comparison 2 (Overall utility/value): Source A portrays the League as weak and useless, whereas Source B views it as an indispensable and 'sole global forum' for peaceful arbitration.

Marking scheme

For each comparison point: Identify the basis of comparison (1 mark) and explain with reference to both sources (1 mark). (Max 4 marks. Award 2 marks per comparison point.)
Question 7 · Explanation (Clue-based)
4 marks
Source A: A memorandum from the Hong Kong Chamber of Commerce in 1957: 'Our local textile mills face severe hardships. The British government's sudden decision to impose voluntary export restraints restricts our market share. Meanwhile, the influx of cheap goods from neighboring regions combined with high raw material costs leaves us with narrow profit margins.' According to Source A, explain two clues that show the economic challenges of Hong Kong's industrial sector in the late 1950s.

Answer

Two challenges: 1. Trade barriers/restrictions from foreign markets (British export restraints). 2. Double squeeze of rising production costs (high raw materials) and intense external competition (cheap goods from neighbors).

Worked solution

Clue 1 (Foreign trade restrictions): The source mentions the British government imposing 'voluntary export restraints' which restricted HK's market share. This explains the challenge of protectionism in overseas markets. Clue 2 (High production cost and market competition): The source mentions 'high raw material costs' and 'influx of cheap goods from neighboring regions' narrowing profits. This explains the challenge of high production costs paired with stiff external competition.

Marking scheme

Identify Clue 1 with reference to source: 1 mark; explain the economic challenge: 1 mark. Identify Clue 2 with reference to source: 1 mark; explain the economic challenge: 1 mark. (Total: 4 marks)
Question 8 · Comparison
4 marks
Source A: President Kennedy's 1962 televised address: 'The Soviet nuclear buildup in Cuba is an unjustified threat to the Western Hemisphere... We must establish a naval quarantine to stop this aggressive action.' Source B: Chairman Khrushchev's 1962 letter: 'Our weapons in Cuba are intended solely for defense, to protect Cuba from potential American invasion... This is a sovereign decision.' Compare the perspectives of the USA and the USSR regarding the deployment of missiles in Cuba.

Answer

The USA views the missile deployment as an offensive threat and aggressive action requiring counter-measures, while the USSR views it as a defensive measure meant to protect an ally from US invasion.

Worked solution

Point of Comparison 1 (Nature of the deployment): The USA (Source A) views it as an offensive, aggressive threat ('unjustified threat to the Western Hemisphere'), whereas the USSR (Source B) views it as purely defensive ('solely for defense'). Point of Comparison 2 (Legitimacy of action): The USA sees the Soviet action as 'aggressive' justifying a quarantine, while the USSR sees it as a legitimate 'sovereign decision' to protect Cuba from US invasion.

Marking scheme

Identify one point of comparison (1 mark) and explain with reference to both sources (1 mark). Identify a second point of comparison (1 mark) and explain with reference to both sources (1 mark). (Total: 4 marks)
Question 9 · Extended Response
8 marks
Source A: An excerpt from a speech by Japanese statesman Okuma Shigenobu in 1908.
"Our nation has made remarkable progress since the Restoration. We have adopted Western institutions, reformed our legal system, and modernized our educational institutions. Our constitution guarantees the rights of citizens. It is these intellectual and moral advancements, rather than the mere clash of arms, that have won us the respect of the civilized world and led to the revision of the unequal treaties."

Source B: A British political cartoon published in 1905.
It depicts a giant Japanese soldier in Western-style military uniform standing over a map of East Asia (with one foot on Port Arthur and another on Korea), holding a rising sun flag. Behind him, figures representing Britain, France, and Germany look on with concern, saying: "An unexpected colossus has risen in the East. Our Asian interests must now be negotiated with Tokyo."

Prompt: "Japan's international status in the period 1895–1912 was primarily enhanced by its domestic reforms rather than its military victories." Do you agree? Explain your answer with reference to Source A and Source B, and using your own knowledge.

Answer

Agree to a limited extent. While domestic reforms (such as constitutional, legal, and educational modernizations mentioned in Source A) earned Western respect and paved the way for treaty revision and the Anglo-Japanese Alliance, it was Japan's decisive military victories (such as the Sino-Japanese and Russo-Japanese Wars shown in Source B) that demonstrated its hard power, forced Western powers to negotiate, and elevated Japan to the status of a first-class imperial power.

Worked solution

The candidate should present a balanced argument discussing both the role of domestic reforms and military victories in enhancing Japan's international status.

Agree (Domestic Reforms):
1. According to Source A, Okuma Shigenobu argues that domestic advancements (legal, educational, and constitutional reforms) won Japan the 'respect of the civilized world' and led to the revision of the unequal treaties, rather than military strength.
2. Own Knowledge: Meiji reforms (e.g., the Meiji Constitution of 1889, legal codes based on Western models, industrialization) convinced Western powers that Japan was a 'civilized' nation, leading to the abolition of extraterritoriality by 1899 and the recovery of tariff autonomy by 1911. These reforms also made Japan an attractive ally, leading to the Anglo-Japanese Alliance (1902).

Disagree (Military Victories):
1. According to Source B, Western powers (Britain, France, Germany) respected and feared Japan because of its military dominance in East Asia, as represented by the giant soldier standing on Port Arthur and Korea after its victory in the Russo-Japanese War (1905).
2. Own Knowledge: Military victories in the Sino-Japanese War (1894-95) and the Russo-Japanese War (1904-05) forced Western powers to recognize Japan as a major imperial power. The victory over Russia, a European power, directly elevated Japan's status to a 'first-class power' and allowed the annexation of Korea (1910).

Conclusion: Both factors were complementary; domestic reforms provided the necessary institutional and economic foundation, while military victories demonstrated Japan's hard power, forcing Western nations to treat Japan as an equal.

Marking scheme

- Uses Source A to support the reform argument (max 2 marks)
- Uses Source B to support the military argument (max 2 marks)
- Integrates relevant own knowledge (e.g., Meiji reforms, Anglo-Japanese Alliance, treaty revision, Sino-Japanese War, Russo-Japanese War) (max 3 marks)
- Presents a balanced, coherent, and well-structured argument with a clear stance (1 mark)
Question 10 · Extended Response
8 marks
Source A: An extract from a memoir by a French diplomat who attended the Paris Peace Conference in 1919.
"For France, the treaty is a matter of survival. We have lost more than a million of our youth. Germany must be rendered permanently incapable of invading us again. If we demand the demilitarization of the Rhineland and heavy reparations, it is not out of malice, but to secure our borders. Clemenceau fought hard for these, but the American President, with his lofty and impractical Fourteen Points, accused us of greed."

Source B: An extract from an editorial in a US newspaper published in July 1919.
"The peace treaty signed at Versailles is not a peace of justice; it is a peace of vengeance. Instead of fostering a new world order based on the League of Nations and self-determination, the European powers have scrambled to carve up territories and impose crushing indemnities on a defeated foe. We have sown the seeds of future conflict."

Prompt: "The Paris Peace Conference of 1919 was characterized more by national self-interest than by the pursuit of lasting world peace." Do you agree? Explain your answer with reference to Source A and Source B, and using your own knowledge.

Answer

Agree to a large extent. While there were efforts to establish a lasting peace through the League of Nations and national self-determination (as noted in Source B and Wilson's Fourteen Points in Source A), the actual negotiations and terms of the Versailles Treaty were dominated by national self-interests, particularly France's demands for reparations and security (Source A), Britain's colonial acquisitions, and Italy's territorial ambitions, which ultimately created a 'peace of vengeance' (Source B).

Worked solution

The candidate should discuss both the presence of national self-interest and the genuine attempts to establish lasting world peace.

Agree (National Self-interest):
1. According to Source A, France prioritized its own security and survival, demanding the demilitarization of the Rhineland and heavy reparations to permanently weaken Germany, showing a focus on national interests over collective security.
2. According to Source B, European powers ignored high ideals to 'carve up territories' and impose 'crushing indemnities' on Germany, turning the treaty into a 'peace of vengeance' that sowed seeds for future conflict.
3. Own Knowledge: Britain sought to protect its naval hegemony and expand its colonial empire by taking Germany's colonies as mandates. Italy walked out of the conference over territorial demands (Fiume). The war guilt clause (Article 231) was designed to justify massive reparation claims to satisfy domestic public opinion in victorious states.

Disagree (Pursuit of Lasting Peace):
1. According to Source A, President Wilson championed the 'Fourteen Points' as a framework for a principled peace, even though other allies criticized it as impractical.
2. According to Source B, there was an initial aspiration to foster a new world order based on the 'League of Nations' and 'self-determination.'
3. Own Knowledge: The Covenant of the League of Nations was successfully integrated into the peace treaties to resolve disputes peacefully. National self-determination led to the creation of independent nation-states in Eastern Europe (such as Poland, Czechoslovakia, and Finland) to resolve ethnic tensions.

Conclusion: Although high-minded ideals for lasting peace were proposed, the ultimate outcome was dominated by the victorious powers' pursuit of national self-interest, leading to a flawed settlement.

Marking scheme

- Uses Source A to explain French/national self-interest (max 2 marks)
- Uses Source B to explain the critique of self-interest and the unrealized ideals of peace (max 2 marks)
- Integrates relevant own knowledge (e.g., details of the Treaty of Versailles, Wilson's 14 Points, creation of League of Nations, national self-determination) (max 3 marks)
- Presents a balanced, coherent, and well-structured argument with a clear stance (1 mark)
Question 11 · Extended Response
8 marks
Source A: An extract from a speech by Soviet leader Joseph Stalin in 1946.
"Our policy is peaceful co-existence. However, we cannot ignore that the capitalist world is preparing for a new conflict. The establishment of friendly governments in Eastern Europe is not an act of expansion; it is a necessary defensive measure to guarantee Soviet security. We have been invaded through Poland twice in thirty years. We must ensure that these countries are no longer used as a corridor for aggression against us."

Source B: An extract from the Truman Doctrine speech delivered by US President Harry Truman in March 1947.
"At the present moment in world history, nearly every nation must choose between alternative ways of life. One way of life is based upon the will of the majority, and is distinguished by free institutions and guarantees of individual liberty. The second way of life is based upon the will of a minority forcibly imposed upon the majority. It relies upon terror and oppression... I believe that it must be the policy of the United States to support free peoples who are resisting attempted subjugation by armed minorities or by outside pressures."

Prompt: "The Cold War in Europe in the period 1945–1949 was primarily caused by Soviet expansionism rather than US containment policy." Do you agree? Explain your answer with reference to Source A and Source B, and using your own knowledge.

Answer

Agree to a limited extent. Although the US perceived Soviet actions in Eastern Europe as aggressive expansionism based on 'terror and oppression' requiring containment (Source B), Source A highlights that Soviet actions were fundamentally defensive security measures to create a buffer zone against historically repeated invasions. The Cold War in Europe was a result of mutual distrust, where US containment policies (Truman Doctrine, Marshall Plan) and Soviet consolidation (salami tactics, Berlin Blockade) continually provoked and escalated tensions.

Worked solution

The candidate should analyze the contributions of both Soviet expansionism and US containment policies to the escalation of the Cold War.

Agree (Soviet Expansionism as the Primary Cause):
1. According to Source B, the Soviet Union was perceived by the US as forcibly imposing a minority-led way of life based on 'terror and oppression' upon majority populations in Europe, necessitating US intervention.
2. Own Knowledge: The Soviet Union established pro-Soviet communist regimes across Eastern Europe (e.g., Poland, Hungary, Romania) through 'salami tactics' and supported the communist coup in Czechoslovakia (1948). The Berlin Blockade (1948-49) was a direct Soviet aggressive move to force Western powers out of Berlin, directly worsening the Cold War.

Disagree (US Containment as the Primary Cause / Soviet Actions were Defensive):
1. According to Source A, Soviet actions in Eastern Europe were not expansionist but 'defensive measures' to ensure national security, since the USSR had been invaded twice through Poland in thirty years.
2. According to Source B, the US actively launched the Truman Doctrine to intervene globally and support anti-communist forces, dividing the world into two ideological camps.
3. Own Knowledge: The US launched the Marshall Plan (1947) to consolidate its economic influence in Western Europe, which Moscow viewed as dollar imperialism. The creation of NATO (1949) represented a military encirclement of the USSR, prompting the division of Europe.

Conclusion: The Cold War was not caused by a single side; it was an interactive process of actions and reactions, where Soviet security concerns were interpreted by the US as aggressive expansionism, leading to containment policies that the Soviets in turn viewed as capitalist aggression.

Marking scheme

- Uses Source A to explain the Soviet defensive perspective (max 2 marks)
- Uses Source B to explain the US perspective of containment/anti-tyranny (max 2 marks)
- Integrates relevant own knowledge (e.g., Soviet expansion in Eastern Europe, Berlin Blockade, Truman Doctrine, Marshall Plan, NATO) (max 3 marks)
- Presents a balanced, coherent, and well-structured argument with a clear stance (1 mark)
Question 12 · Extended Response
8 marks
Source A: An excerpt from an official report by the Chinese Communist Party in 1987 regarding economic performance.
"Since the Third Plenary Session of the Eleventh Central Committee, our socialist modernization has achieved unprecedented success. From 1978 to 1986, the average annual growth rate of the national economy reached over 9%. The reform in rural areas has solved the problem of food and clothing for hundreds of millions. In urban areas, the expansion of enterprise autonomy has stimulated productivity. Consumer goods, once scarce, are now abundant in our markets."

Source B: An extract from an oral history interview with a state-owned enterprise (SOE) worker in Liaoning province, conducted in 1995, reflecting on his experience in the late 1980s.
"In the late 1980s, things began to change rapidly. Although there were more goods in the market, prices skyrocketed due to price reforms. My monthly wages could barely keep up with inflation. At the factory, they introduced the 'Contract Responsibility System' and started cutting welfare benefits. Many of my colleagues were laid off under the name of 'optimizing labor structure.' For us workers, the iron rice bowl was broken, and we felt immense anxiety about the future."

Prompt: "The economic reforms of China in the 1980s brought more challenges than benefits to the Chinese people." Do you agree? Explain your answer with reference to Source A and Source B, and using your own knowledge.

Answer

Disagree to a large extent. Although reforms brought significant transitional challenges in the late 1980s, such as price hikes, inflation, the loss of the "iron rice bowl," and worker layoffs in state enterprises (as shown in Source B), the overall long-term benefits to the Chinese population were immense. As shown in Source A and supported by own knowledge, these reforms achieved double-digit growth, successfully resolved basic food and clothing shortages for hundreds of millions of rural citizens, stimulated productivity, ended rationing, and laid the foundation for China's rise as a global economic powerhouse.

Worked solution

The candidate should evaluate both the positive outcomes (benefits) and negative consequences (challenges) of China's economic reforms in the 1980s.

Agree (More Challenges):
1. According to Source B, urban workers suffered from skyrocketing prices and severe inflation due to price reforms, making wages insufficient.
2. According to Source B, reforms like the 'Contract Responsibility System' led to the cutting of social welfare and the breaking of the 'iron rice bowl' through layoffs (下崗), creating high social anxiety.
3. Own Knowledge: Economic reforms led to rising corruption (such as 'guandao' or official speculation) and widening income inequality between coastal regions (SEZs) and the interior. Inflation in 1988 reached over 18%, which fueled severe public discontent and contributed directly to the social unrest of 1989.

Disagree (More Benefits):
1. According to Source A, the reform brought massive economic growth (over 9% annually) and solved the starvation/clothing crisis for hundreds of millions of rural citizens.
2. According to Source A, urban productivity increased and consumer goods became abundant, ending the era of shortage and ration coupons.
3. Own Knowledge: The Household Responsibility System greatly motivated farmers and raised agricultural yields. The establishment of Special Economic Zones (SEZs like Shenzhen) attracted foreign capital, created millions of jobs, and integrated China into the global economy, significantly improving overall standards of living.

Conclusion: Although the transition to a market-oriented economy created painful social challenges such as inflation and loss of job security, the overall benefits in terms of national wealth, poverty reduction, and material abundance far outweighed these transitional challenges.

Marking scheme

- Uses Source A to discuss the benefits of economic reforms (max 2 marks)
- Uses Source B to discuss the challenges of economic reforms (max 2 marks)
- Integrates relevant own knowledge (e.g., Household Responsibility System, SEZs, guandao/corruption, inflation, 1989 social unrest, loss of welfare/welfare reforms) (max 3 marks)
- Presents a balanced, coherent, and well-structured argument with a clear stance (1 mark)

Paper 2 (Essay Questions)

Choose any TWO essay-type questions. Answers should exhibit comprehensive historical analysis, coherent arguments, and balanced coverage of the designated eras.
7 Question · 175 marks
Question 1 · Analytical Essay Question
25 marks
To what extent did the rise of militarism in Japan during the 1930s stem from domestic economic crises rather than its foreign policy ambitions since the Meiji period? Explain your answer with reference to Japan's development up to 1941.

Answer

A balanced essay should argue that while domestic economic crises (such as the Great Depression) acted as the immediate catalyst that discredited party politics and empowered the military, the long-term foreign policy ambitions dating back to the Meiji period (such as the Continental Policy) provided the ideological framework and strategic direction for militarist expansion.

Worked solution

Introduction:
- State the thesis: Domestic economic crises in the 1930s were the immediate trigger (catalyst) that accelerated the rise of militarism, but long-term foreign policy ambitions since the Meiji period provided the fundamental ideological foundation and ultimate objectives.

Body Paragraph 1: The role of domestic economic crises (immediate factor)
- Detail the impact of the Great Depression (1929) and Showa Depression on Japan (collapse of silk exports, soaring unemployment, rural poverty).
- Explain how this discredited civilian party governments (e.g., Minseito, Seiyukai) due to their perceived incompetence and corruption (Zaibatsu collusion).
- Show how the military presented expansion into Manchuria as a 'lifeline' to solve economic problems, gaining mass public support.

Body Paragraph 2: Long-term foreign policy ambitions since the Meiji period (fundamental factor)
- Trace the continuity of the 'Continental Policy' (Chiriku Seisaku) and the ambition to dominate East Asia since Meiji.
- Examples include the First Sino-Japanese War (1894-95), Anglo-Japanese Alliance (1902), Russo-Japanese War (1904-05), and the Twenty-One Demands (1915).
- Argue that the militarists' goals in the 1930s (e.g., Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere) were natural extensions of these traditional expansionist ambitions.

Body Paragraph 3: Interrelation of both factors
- Discuss how economic crises provided the perfect pretext and opportunity for the military to execute pre-existing plans (e.g., the Kwantung Army's orchestration of the Manchurian Incident in 1931).
- Constitutional loopholes (independence of supreme command) allowed the military to bypass cabinet control during times of crisis.

Conclusion:
- Summarize that domestic economic crises transformed passive imperialist ambition into active military dictatorship and aggressive expansion in the 1930s, making both factors indispensable to the rise of militarism, though the foreign policy ambition acted as the deeper, guiding force.

Marking scheme

L6 (21-25 marks): Demonstrates a highly analytical, balanced, and well-structured argument. Evaluates both domestic economic crises (Great Depression, rural distress) and long-term foreign policy ambitions (Meiji legacy, Continental Policy) with precise historical facts. Clear comparison of their relative importance.
L5 (16-20 marks): Good understanding of both factors. Argument is generally balanced, though one aspect might be slightly stronger than the other. Solid historical evidence presented.
L4 (11-15 marks): Attempts to address both factors but tends to write a narrative account rather than an analytical comparison. May overemphasize one factor while neglecting the other.
L3 (6-10 marks): Weak structure, mostly descriptive. Fails to link the economic/foreign policy factors directly to the rise of militarism in the 1930s.
L1-2 (1-5 marks): Off-topic or very poor historical knowledge with major errors.
Question 2 · Analytical Essay Question
25 marks
Assess the view that the failure of the League of Nations in the 1930s was primarily due to the design of its own Covenant rather than the self-interested policies of Britain and France.

Answer

Candidates may either agree or disagree, but they must provide a balanced comparison between the structural flaws of the League's Covenant (such as the unanimity rule and lack of a standing army) and the specific foreign policies of Britain and France (such as appeasement and the Hoare-Laval Pact).

Worked solution

Introduction:
- Define the scope (1930s League failures: Manchurian Crisis, Abyssinian Crisis, Disarmament Conference).
- State thesis: While the Covenant's design flaws (structural weaknesses) made collective security difficult to enforce, it was the self-interested policies of Britain and France (the primary leaders) that ultimately paralyzed the League during critical crises.

Body Paragraph 1: Flaws in the design of the Covenant
- Unanimity rule in the Assembly and Council made decisive action nearly impossible against powerful aggressors who could veto resolutions.
- Lack of a standing army meant the League relied on member states to voluntarily supply troops, which never materialized.
- Weak mechanism for economic sanctions (often optional, and non-members like the US could bypass them).

Body Paragraph 2: Self-interested policies of Britain and France
- Detailed examination of the Manchurian Crisis (1931): Britain refused to support economic sanctions due to its economic interests in East Asia and reluctance to provoke Japan.
- Detailed examination of the Abyssinian Crisis (1935): Hoare-Laval Pact showed Britain and France bypassing the League to appease Mussolini, dealing a fatal blow to the League's credibility.
- Appeasement Policy: prioritizing national recovery from the Great Depression and fear of another world war over upholding collective security.

Body Paragraph 3: Comparison & Synthesis
- Argue that even with a flawed Covenant, the League could have functioned if Britain and France had shown strong political will. Conversely, even a perfect Covenant would fail if its strongest members refused to implement its clauses.
- The absence of major powers like the USA (a structural flaw) further encouraged Britain and France to adopt self-interested policies.

Conclusion:
- Conclude that while the Covenant's design set up a weak foundation, the self-interested actions and appeasement policy of Britain and France were the decisive forces that sealed the League's failure in the 1930s.

Marking scheme

L6 (21-25 marks): Highly analytical response that directly addresses the 'primarily... rather than...' comparative requirement. Uses extensive and precise case studies (Manchuria, Abyssinia). Clearly demonstrates how the two factors interacted.
L5 (16-20 marks): Good balanced essay. Addresses both the League's Covenant and British/French policies. Arguments are supported by sound historical evidence.
L4 (11-15 marks): Tends to list the failures of the League chronologically or write separate essays on the Covenant and the crises without sufficient comparison.
L3 (6-10 marks): Descriptive account of the League's failures. Weak analysis of the comparison.
L1-2 (1-5 marks): Poor understanding of the topic, containing major historical inaccuracies or irrelevant information.
Question 3 · Analytical Essay Question
25 marks
To what extent did the Cuban Missile Crisis (1962) mark a turning point in the development of the Cold War from confrontation to coexistence? Explain your answer with reference to international relations from 1953 to 1979.

Answer

A strong essay will evaluate the degree of transformation after 1962, acknowledging both the shift toward détente (e.g., Hot Line, SALT I) and the persistent elements of Cold War confrontation (e.g., Vietnam War, proxy conflicts, nuclear arms race) that continued past 1962, as well as the pre-1962 attempts at coexistence.

Worked solution

Introduction:
- Define 'confrontation to coexistence' and set the chronological boundaries (1953-1979).
- Thesis: The Cuban Missile Crisis was a significant turning point as it brought the superpowers to the brink of nuclear war, prompting structured detente. However, its 'turning point' status is qualified by early coexistence efforts before 1962 and continuing regional proxy confrontations after 1962.

Body Paragraph 1: Arguments for the Crisis as a Turning Point (Détente and Coexistence post-1962)
- The shock of the crisis led to immediate communication improvements (the Moscow-Washington Hot Line, 1963).
- Arms control treaties were initiated: Limited Test Ban Treaty (1963), Non-Proliferation Treaty (1968), and eventually SALT I (1972).
- Shift in diplomatic atmosphere: Nixon's visit to Moscow, the signing of the Basic Agreement, and the Helsinki Accords (1975).

Body Paragraph 2: Arguments qualifying the 'Turning Point' – Pre-1962 Coexistence Attempts
- Coexistence was not entirely new after 1962. Khrushchev had introduced the concept of 'Peaceful Coexistence' in 1956.
- Early summits occurred before 1962: Geneva Summit (1955) and Khrushchev's visit to the US (Camp David, 1959).

Body Paragraph 3: Arguments qualifying the 'Turning Point' – Continued Confrontation post-1962
- Confrontation did not end; it merely shifted to proxy wars in the Third World.
- The Vietnam War (1965-1973) saw heavy US involvement and Soviet/Chinese aid to North Vietnam.
- Other conflicts: Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia (1968), Yom Kippur War (1973), and the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan (1979) which ended detente.
- The nuclear arms race actually accelerated quantitatively as both sides sought parity after 1962.

Conclusion:
- Synthesize that while the Cuban Missile Crisis was the most dramatic catalyst for institutionalizing coexistence (treaties, communication), it did not completely eradicate Cold War confrontation, representing a transition rather than a clean break.

Marking scheme

L6 (21-25 marks): Exceptional conceptual understanding of 'confrontation' and 'coexistence'. Highly structured, analyzing the period 1953-1979 comprehensively. Evaluates both the changes and continuities post-1962.
L5 (16-20 marks): Clear analysis of the Cuban Missile Crisis and its aftermath. Good reference to the required timeframe (1953-1979), with minor imbalances in coverage.
L4 (11-15 marks): Tends to focus heavily on the details of the Cuban Missile Crisis itself rather than analyzing it as a potential turning point across the specified timeframe.
L3 (6-10 marks): Descriptive account of Cold War events. Lacks a clear argument on 'turning point' or 'to what extent'.
L1-2 (1-5 marks): Confused chronology, minimal historical facts, or fails to address the question.
Question 4 · Analytical Essay Question
25 marks
To what extent did Hong Kong's economic restructuring from the 1950s to the 1980s depend on external geopolitical developments rather than internal factors? Explain your answer.

Answer

A strong essay should analyze the industrialization (1950s-70s) and subsequent shift to a service-based financial hub (1980s), balancing external triggers (Korean War embargo, China's reform and opening) with internal domestic assets (labor, entrepreneurs, colonial policies).

Worked solution

Introduction:
- Identify the dual-phase economic restructuring: (1) Entrepôt to manufacturing/industrialization (1950s-1970s), (2) Manufacturing to financial/service-oriented economy (1980s).
- Thesis: External geopolitical developments acted as primary external stimuli and structural constraints, but internal factors were absolutely crucial in enabling Hong Kong to adapt and succeed.

Body Paragraph 1: External Geopolitical Developments (The Stimuli)
- The Korean War (1950-53) and subsequent UN embargo on China destroyed Hong Kong's traditional entrepôt trade, forcing it to industrialize.
- The Chinese Civil War (1946-49) and communist victory led to a massive influx of capital, machinery, and skilled entrepreneurs from Shanghai.
- China's Reform and Opening Up (1978) under Deng Xiaoping allowed Hong Kong factories to relocate to the Pearl River Delta, initiating the second restructuring into a service and financial hub.
- Western trade quotas (e.g., Multi-Fibre Arrangement) forced HK manufacturers to upgrade their products.

Body Paragraph 2: Internal Factors (The Enablers)
- Government Policies: The colonial government's policy of 'positive non-interventionism' (Sir John Cowperthwaite) kept taxes low, encouraging investment.
- Abundant Labor: Refugee inflows provided cheap, highly industrious, and flexible labor.
- Institutional Strengths: Rule of law, British legal system, free port status, and stable financial infrastructure.
- Infrastructure: Expansion of port facilities, construction of industrial estates (e.g., Kwun Tong), and public housing to stabilize labor costs.

Body Paragraph 3: Synthesis
- Argue that geopolitical events created the necessity and the initial inputs, but Hong Kong's survival and thriving depended entirely on the internal capacity of its government, businesses, and workforce to capitalize on these shifts.

Conclusion:
- Conclude that while external geopolitics dictated the timing and direction of the restructuring, internal adaptability and institutional strengths were the decisive factors that guaranteed its success.

Marking scheme

L6 (21-25 marks): Well-structured, highly analytical essay that integrates the two phases of restructuring (1950s-70s and 1980s). Sophisticated balancing of external geopolitics (Korean War, 1978 Reforms) and internal conditions (laissez-faire, refugees, labor).
L5 (16-20 marks): Clear understanding of both phases of restructuring and the respective roles of external and internal factors. Strong factual support.
L4 (11-15 marks): Discusses the factors but may treat them separately without sufficient integration. May overfocus on the 1950s/60s and neglect the 1980s shift.
L3 (6-10 marks): Descriptive overview of Hong Kong's economic history. Lacks analytical depth regarding 'to what extent'.
L1-2 (1-5 marks): Barely answers the question, containing major errors or very brief responses.
Question 5 · Analytical Essay Question
25 marks
'The introduction of "Socialism with Chinese Characteristics" after 1978 was more of a continuation of Maoist economic practices than a radical break from them.' Do you agree? Explain your answer with reference to the economic reforms in China up to 2000.

Answer

Candidates must examine both sides of the argument, comparing the continuities (state ownership, CCP supremacy, planned elements) with the radical shifts (market mechanisms, Special Economic Zones, private enterprise) in China's post-1978 economy.

Worked solution

Introduction:
- Define 'Socialism with Chinese Characteristics' initiated by Deng Xiaoping in 1978.
- Take a clear stance: While structural elements of state control and the socialist framework remained (continuation), the introduction of market forces, opening to the West, and dismantling of collective agriculture constituted a radical break from Maoist economics.

Body Paragraph 1: Arguments for 'Continuation' (Similarities with the Maoist Era)
- Dominance of State-Owned Enterprises (SOEs): Even with reforms, vital sectors (energy, banking, heavy industry) remained under state monopolies.
- Continued reliance on state planning: Five-Year Plans continued to guide economic goals.
- Ideological and political alignment: The state maintained the leadership of the CCP and socialist public ownership of land.

Body Paragraph 2: Arguments for 'Radical Break' (Differences from the Maoist Era)
- Agricultural Reform: Dismantling of the People's Communes and introduction of the Household Responsibility System (reintroducing private incentive).
- Marketization and Private Sector: Permitting private enterprises (getihu) and foreign direct investment (FDI).
- Open Door Policy: Establishment of Special Economic Zones (SEZs like Shenzhen) to integrate China into the global capitalist economy—a stark contrast to Mao's self-reliance.
- Abandonment of Class Struggle: Shifting the national focus entirely to economic modernization (Four Modernizations).

Body Paragraph 3: Synthesis and Evaluation
- Explain how Deng's famous pragmatism ('seeking truth from facts', 'black cat, white cat') fundamentally redefined the socialist goal from ideological purity to wealth generation, thereby representing a conceptual and practical revolution.

Conclusion:
- Reiterate that although the political-legal shell remained socialist (continuation), the operational core of China's economy underwent a radical break, adopting state capitalism/market socialism that Mao would have rejected.

Marking scheme

L6 (21-25 marks): Displays an excellent conceptual grasp of both Maoist and Dengist economic policies. Formulates a sophisticated, balanced argument comparing continuities and breaks. Supported by precise details (SEZs, Communes, SOEs, Household Responsibility System).
L5 (16-20 marks): Balanced discussion of both sides. Clear comparison, though one side may be argued with slightly more depth than the other.
L4 (11-15 marks): Tends to describe China's post-1978 reforms chronologically without focusing enough on the comparison with the Maoist era.
L3 (6-10 marks): General description of Deng's reforms. Minimal reference to Maoist policies or the concept of 'continuation'.
L1-2 (1-5 marks): Confused answer with major historical errors regarding post-1978 China.
Question 6 · Analytical Essay Question
25 marks
Assess the effectiveness of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) in promoting global cultural preservation and mutual understanding during the Cold War era. Support your answer with relevant historical facts.

Answer

A successful essay will analyze both the major successes of UNESCO (e.g., World Heritage Convention, Nubia campaign) and its limitations (e.g., ideological politicization, Western-Eastern conflicts, US withdrawal in 1984) to determine its overall effectiveness.

Worked solution

Introduction:
- Define UNESCO's mission (founded in 1945 to build peace in the minds of men through education, science, and culture).
- Thesis: UNESCO achieved historic successes in codifying cultural heritage and executing global campaigns, but its effectiveness was heavily hindered by Cold War political rivalries and North-South ideological polarization.

Body Paragraph 1: Successes in Cultural Preservation and Mutual Understanding
- International Campaigns: The Nubia Campaign in Egypt (1959-1980) successfully relocated the Abu Simbel temples, showing unprecedented global solidarity across Cold War lines.
- Standard-Setting: The adoption of the World Heritage Convention (1972) created a revolutionary framework for designating and protecting cultural and natural sites worldwide.
- Education and Literacy: Massive literacy campaigns in developing nations (e.g., in Latin America and Africa) that built mutual understanding through shared knowledge.

Body Paragraph 2: Limitations and Challenges (The Impact of the Cold War and Ideology)
- Politicization: UNESCO became a battleground for Cold War propaganda. The Soviet Union and developing nations used it to criticize Western imperialism.
- The New World Information and Communication Order (NWICO) debate: In the 1970s and 80s, developing nations (supported by the USSR) pushed for NWICO to counter Western media dominance. The West viewed this as an attempt to restrict press freedom.
- US and UK Withdrawals: Accusing UNESCO of financial mismanagement, anti-Western bias, and serving Soviet interests, the US withdrew in 1984, followed by the UK in 1985, severely depleting the organization's budget.

Conclusion:
- Conclude that UNESCO was highly effective in establishing enduring structural norms for cultural preservation, but its noble goal of promoting 'mutual understanding' was frequently hijacked by the realpolitik and ideological warfare of the Cold War.

Marking scheme

L6 (21-25 marks): Masterful evaluation of UNESCO. Discusses specific programs (Nubia, 1972 Convention) and places them within the context of the Cold War (NWICO, US withdrawal). Shows highly balanced and analytical structure.
L5 (16-20 marks): Balanced discussion of both successes and limitations. Good use of facts, though maybe slightly less detail on the Cold War dynamics.
L4 (11-15 marks): Tends to describe the general functions of UNESCO with limited focus on the actual effectiveness or the Cold War context.
L3 (6-10 marks): Vague or superficial understanding of UNESCO. Writes a general essay on UN agencies without specific focus on cultural/social aspects.
L1-2 (1-5 marks): Off-topic, containing brief or highly inaccurate generalizations.
Question 7 · Analytical Essay Question
25 marks
Compare the effectiveness of the Late Qing Reform (1901-1911) and the Nanjing Decade (1927-1937) in modernising China's political and economic systems.

Answer

A comparative essay that structures analysis around thematic lines (political reforms, economic reforms, and limitations) to evaluate which period achieved greater modernization and why.

Worked solution

Introduction:
- Define the periods: Late Qing Reform (New Policy) and the Nanjing Decade under the KMT.
- Thesis: While both periods laid important foundations for modernization, the Nanjing Decade was overall more effective in economic modernization due to national sovereignty recoveries, whereas both ultimately failed to build a lasting, stable political system due to external pressures and internal authoritarianism.

Body Paragraph 1: Political Modernization (Comparison)
- Late Qing: Attempted constitutional monarchy, abolished the imperial exam system (1905), established local provincial assemblies. However, the 'Royal Cabinet' (1911) alienated Han gentry, triggering revolution.
- Nanjing Decade: Adopted Sun Yat-sen's 'Three Stages of Revolution' but remained stuck in 'Political Tutelage' (KMT one-party dictatorship). Modern administrative structures (Five Yuans) were set up, but warlordism persisted and democracy was suppressed.
- Comparison: Late Qing reforms inadvertently led to the dynasty's collapse, while Nanjing reforms centralized power but failed to achieve democratic transition.

Body Paragraph 2: Economic Modernization (Comparison)
- Late Qing: Promoted commerce, established the Ministry of Commerce, attempted currency reform, and built railways (e.g., Beijing-Zhangjiakou). However, progress was slow and disrupted by financial deficits and local opposition (Railway Protection Movement).
- Nanjing Decade: Gained tariff autonomy, reformed the monetary system by introducing the Fabi (legal tender, 1935), established modern central banking, built extensive railway and highway networks, and stimulated industrial growth.
- Comparison: Nanjing was vastly more effective in economic terms, successfully establishing a unified modern monetary system and securing fiscal sovereignty.

Body Paragraph 3: Limitations of Both
- Both were hampered by external threats (imperialism, Japanese aggression) and internal rebellions (revolutions, Chinese Communist Party).
- Both suffered from high corruption and disproportionate military spending at the expense of social welfare and agricultural reform.

Conclusion:
- Reiterate that the Nanjing Decade was more cohesive and effective in economic state-building, but both fell short of achieving a stable, modern constitutional political system.

Marking scheme

L6 (21-25 marks): Excellent comparative structure. Directly compares political and economic aspects point-by-point. Rich in historical evidence (Fabi, Royal Cabinet, Tariff Autonomy). Shows sophisticated historical judgment on 'effectiveness'.
L5 (16-20 marks): Clear comparative structure with a balanced evaluation of both eras. Good factual detail, though the synthesis may be slightly less integrated than L6.
L4 (11-15 marks): Tends to write two separate essays (one on Late Qing, one on Nanjing Decade) and only compares them briefly in the conclusion.
L3 (6-10 marks): Descriptive overview of both periods. Weak or superficial comparison.
L1-2 (1-5 marks): Barely addresses the comparison, containing serious historical errors or irrelevant material.