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IKS Lecture: Seung-kyung Kim, "Feminist Politics to Family Politics?: Childcare Policy Debates in South Korea"

Seung-kyung Kim
September 21, 2016
11:30AM - 12:30PM
Dulles Hall 168 (230 Annie and John Glenn Ave)

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Add to Calendar 2016-09-21 11:30:00 2016-09-21 12:30:00 IKS Lecture: Seung-kyung Kim, "Feminist Politics to Family Politics?: Childcare Policy Debates in South Korea" The Institute for Korean Studies presents"Feminist Politics to Family Politics?: Childcare Policy Debates in South Korea"Seung-kyung Kim, Korea Foundation ProfessorDepartment of East Asian Languages and CulturesDirector, Institute for Korean StudiesIndiana University BloomingtonFlyer: Seung-kyung Kim Flyer.pdfAbstract: In 2003, in response to Korea’s dramatically low fertility rate, the administration of President Roh Moo Hyun began to develop policies to provide families with childcare and lessen the financial burden of having children. Childcare policy became a sharply contested arena as conflicting visions of quality, fairness, and access struggled for dominance. On the one hand, Roh’s leftist allies advocated a policy of broad access to publically funded childcare as part of an agenda of fairness and equality, while other groups supported a neoliberal market-based approach which built on existing commercial providers who were able to provide innovative programs, but at high cost and only to those who could afford them. In the end, the neoliberal group prevailed and the vision of publically funded high-quality childcare was abandoned. This paper traces the recent childcare policy in South Korea and examines the surrounding debates.Bio: Seung-kyung Kim is the Korea Foundation Professor in the Department of East Asian Languages and Cultures, and Director of the Institute for Korean Studies within the School of Global and International Studies. Her scholarship addresses the participation of women in social movements as workers and in relation to the state; the processes of transnational migration in the context of globalization and the experiences of families in that process, especially with regard to education; and feminist theories of social change. Besides numerous journal articles and book chapters, she is the author of Class Struggle or Family Struggle?: Lives of Women Factory Workers in South Korea (Cambridge University Press, 2009/1997) and The Korean Women's Movement and the State: Bargaining for Change (Routledge, 2016/2014), and co-editor of Feminist Theory Reader: Local and Global Perspectives (Routledge, 2016/2013/2009/2003). Free and open to the public.  This event is sponsored in part by a U.S. Department of Education Title VI grant to The Ohio State University East Asian Studies Center. Dulles Hall 168 (230 Annie and John Glenn Ave) East Asian Studies Center easc@osu.edu America/New_York public

The Institute for Korean Studies presents

"Feminist Politics to Family Politics?: Childcare Policy Debates in South Korea"

Seung-kyung Kim, Korea Foundation Professor
Department of East Asian Languages and Cultures
Director, Institute for Korean Studies
Indiana University Bloomington

Flyer: PDF icon PDF iconPDF icon PDF icon Seung-kyung Kim Flyer.pdf

Abstract: In 2003, in response to Korea’s dramatically low fertility rate, the administration of President Roh Moo Hyun began to develop policies to provide families with childcare and lessen the financial burden of having children. Childcare policy became a sharply contested arena as conflicting visions of quality, fairness, and access struggled for dominance. On the one hand, Roh’s leftist allies advocated a policy of broad access to publically funded childcare as part of an agenda of fairness and equality, while other groups supported a neoliberal market-based approach which built on existing commercial providers who were able to provide innovative programs, but at high cost and only to those who could afford them. In the end, the neoliberal group prevailed and the vision of publically funded high-quality childcare was abandoned. This paper traces the recent childcare policy in South Korea and examines the surrounding debates.

Bio: Seung-kyung Kim is the Korea Foundation Professor in the Department of East Asian Languages and Cultures, and Director of the Institute for Korean Studies within the School of Global and International Studies. Her scholarship addresses the participation of women in social movements as workers and in relation to the state; the processes of transnational migration in the context of globalization and the experiences of families in that process, especially with regard to education; and feminist theories of social change. Besides numerous journal articles and book chapters, she is the author of Class Struggle or Family Struggle?: Lives of Women Factory Workers in South Korea (Cambridge University Press, 2009/1997) and The Korean Women's Movement and the State: Bargaining for Change (Routledge, 2016/2014), and co-editor of Feminist Theory Reader: Local and Global Perspectives (Routledge, 2016/2013/2009/2003).

 
Free and open to the public. 
 
This event is sponsored in part by a U.S. Department of Education Title VI grant to The Ohio State University East Asian Studies Center.