Full metadata record
DC Field | Value | Language |
---|---|---|
dc.contributor.author | 김은미 | * |
dc.contributor.author | Jean S. Kang(강지현) | * |
dc.date.accessioned | 2016-08-27T02:08:48Z | - |
dc.date.available | 2016-08-27T02:08:48Z | - |
dc.date.issued | 2007 | * |
dc.identifier.issn | 0023-3900 | * |
dc.identifier.other | OAK-4554 | * |
dc.identifier.uri | https://dspace.ewha.ac.kr/handle/2015.oak/216212 | - |
dc.description.abstract | South Korea is rapidly becoming a multiethnic society with over one million foreign residents as of September 2007, which is a significant social phenomenon given South Korea's long history of "mono-ethnic" ideology and its non-immigrant political system. This research is a preliminary study of South Korea's changing ethnic landscape with an examination of Seoul's growing foreign communities. This study utilizes a qualitative research method with its analytical framework developed from the following three groups of studies: 1) development of large metropolis with the advent of globalization involving massive flows of labor and capital, 2) ethnic residential enclaves in immigrant societies; and 3) South Korea's foreign residents and discourse on multiculturalism. This study reveals that Seoul has two different types of foreign communities: 1) foreign residential communities formed around schools since the 1970s, which are represented by the Japanese and Chinese communities, respectively; and 2) "foreign cultural communities," non-permanent but regularly forming one. Both of these communities are found as important space for long-term foreign residents living in a nation with a 98% ethnic majority population. This study suggests that we need to develop a new sociological perspective in understanding foreign communities in non-immigrant societies such as South Korea in the age of globalization. | * |
dc.language | English | * |
dc.publisher | KOREAN NATL COMMISSION UNESCO | * |
dc.subject | foreign community | * |
dc.subject | foreign cultural community | * |
dc.subject | foreign residential community | * |
dc.subject | globalization | * |
dc.subject | multiculturalism | * |
dc.title | Seoul as a global city with ethnic villages | * |
dc.type | Article | * |
dc.relation.issue | 4 | * |
dc.relation.volume | 47 | * |
dc.relation.index | AHCI | * |
dc.relation.index | SCOPUS | * |
dc.relation.index | KCI | * |
dc.relation.startpage | 64 | * |
dc.relation.lastpage | 99 | * |
dc.relation.journaltitle | KOREA JOURNAL | * |
dc.identifier.wosid | WOS:000252505400004 | * |
dc.author.google | Kim, Eun Mee | * |
dc.author.google | Kang, Jean S. | * |
dc.contributor.scopusid | 김은미(55599877600;57201686953) | * |
dc.contributor.scopusid | Jean S. Kang(강지현)(57195485074) | * |
dc.date.modifydate | 20240301081003 | * |