“Ethnic Capital” and “Flexible Citizenship” in Unfavorable Legal Contexts: Stepwise Migration of the Korean Chinese within and beyond Northeast Asia 12.3.24
As part of its Rethinking Korea: New Perspectives on a Critical Region speakers series, The Global Asian Studies Program is proud to present the lecture “Ethnic Capital” and “Flexible Citizenship” in Unfavorable Legal Contexts: Stepwise Migration of the Korean Chinese within and beyond Northeast Asia, given by Dr. Jaeeun Kim, Associate Professor of Sociology and an affiliated faculty member at University of Michigan. This event will take place on Tuesday, December 3rd, 4-6:00PM in Northeastern’s Renaissance Park, RP-310. Please join us! Find details and registration link below.
The Korean peninsula exerts an outsized influence on almost every facet of the world today. South Korea has emerged as one of the largest economies in the world, whose exports include everything from advanced technologies to popular culture. North Korea remains an authoritarian regime, whose efforts to challenge its international isolation threatens to ignite a global conflict. The peninsula is thus a critical engine of the global economy and a volatile flashpoint of geopolitical tensions. It is too important to be overlooked, let alone ignored.Now in its second year, the Rethinking Korea: New Perspectives on a Critical Region speakers series continues to invite an interdisciplinary roster of scholars to offer novel perspectives on Korea while situating its complex place within global developments. We invite speakers to share their work that will not only shed light on the internal dynamics and rich history of Korea but also explore the complex relationship between this critical region and the larger world.
This lecture in this year’s series will feature Dr. Jaeeun Kim, an Associate Professor of Sociology and an affiliated faculty member at University of Michigan. She specializes in in questions of human mobility, inequality, power, and agency. Her first book, Contested Embrace: Transborder Membership Politics in Twentieth-Century Korea (Stanford University Press, 2016), analyzes disputes over the belonging of Koreans in Japan and China, focusing on their contested relationship with the colonial and postcolonial states in the Korean peninsula.
The speakers series is made possible by the South Korea Initiative Fund, which is dedicated to helping establish an institutional commitment to Korean Studies at Northeastern, offering financial support to students studying or working in Korea, and educating the community about important issues regarding Korea in the world.