바로가기메뉴

본문 바로가기 주메뉴 바로가기

The Review of Korean Studies

  • P-ISSN1229-0076
  • E-ISSN2773-9351
  • SCOPUS, ESCI

Education for Young North Korean Migrants: South Koreans’ Ambivalent “Others” and the Challenges of Belonging

The Review of Korean Studies / The Review of Korean Studies, (P)1229-0076; (E)2773-9351
2011, v.14 no.1, pp.89-112
https://doi.org/10.25024/review.2011.14.1.004

Abstract

This article explores the nature of the difficulties young North Korean migrants experience in South Korea, the ways in which they negotiate these constraints, and in turn how this negotiation shapes their sense of belonging. The wane of the Cold War facilitated globalization, but there are still many things on the ground that remake internal ideological/cultural/political boundaries that mediate against full citizenship. I argue that while young North Korean migrants also are products of the demise of the Cold War, Korean national division and the persistent cold war culture that the division has produced contribute to both their nearly automatic gain of legal membership and their difficulties in achieving full membership. In particular, I examine education as a key context in which these young people experience these regimes of dis/incorporation. Constructed as an ambivalent “other” at schools by peers and teachers based on their stereotypes of North Korea and the transference of these stereotypes to North Korean migrants, these young migrants are struggling to have a sense of belonging by developing various strategies. I suggest considering the disruptions of boundaries and multiple affiliations of these migrants not as signs of disloyalty and threats to social cohesion, but as a source for new visions of identity and belonging that are required to pursue national unification in this multicultural and globalized world.

keywords
young North Korean migrants, education, citizenship, sense of belonging, othering

Reference

1.

Abu El-Haj, Thea. R. 2002. Contesting the Politics of Culture, Rewriting the Boundaries of Inclusion: Working for Social Justice with Muslim and Arab Communities. Anthropology & Education Quarterly 33(3):308-16.

2.

Banks, James A. 2007. Democratic Citizenship Education in Multicultural Societies. In Diversity and Citizenship Education: Global Perspectives. Ed. James A. Banks. 3-16. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.

3.

Bartlett, Lesley. 2007. Human Capital or Human Connections? The Cultural Meanings of Education in Brazil. Teachers College Record 109(7):1613-636.

4.

Bejerano, Cynthia L.. 2005. Que onda? Urban Youth cultures and border Identity. Tucson: University of Arizona Press.

5.

Castles, Stephen and Alastair Davidson. 2000. Citizenship and Migration: Globalization and the Politics of Belonging. New York: Routledge.

6.

Chon. Hyo-gwan. 2000. Bundanui eoneo talbundanui eoneo (Division Language, Post-Division Language). In Talbundansidaereul yeolmyeo (Opening the Era of Post-Division). Ed. Haejoang Chohan & Woo-young Lee. 66-94. Seoul: Samin.

7.

Choo, Hae Yeon. 2006. Gendered Modernity and Ethnicized Citizenship: North KoreanSettlers in Contemporary South Korea. Gender & Society 20(5):576-604.

8.

Chung, Byung-ho and Woo-taek Jeon. 2006. North Korean Defectors’ Life in South, Seoul: Hanyang University Press.

9.

Chung, Byung-ho. 2009. Between Defector and Migrant: Identities and Strategies of North Koreans in South Korea. Korean Studies 32:1-32.

10.

Fine, Michelle. 2008. Muslim American Youth. New York and London: New York University Press.

11.

Gupta, Akhil and James Ferguson. 1992. Beyond “Culture”: Space, Identity, and the Politics of Difference. Cultural Anthropology 7(1):6-23

12.

Hall, Stuart. 1996. Introduction: Who Needs ‘Identity’?. In Questions of Cultural Identity. Ed. Stuart Hall and Paul du Gay. London & California: SAGE Publications Ltd.

13.

Hwang, Jung-Mi. 2010. Damunhwasimin eomnun damunhwagyoyuk: Hanguk damunhwagyoyuk ajendae gwanhan yeongu (Multicultural Education Without Multicultural Citizens: An Analysis of Policy Agenda for Multicultural Education in Korea). Damnon 201 13(2):93-123.

14.

Keaton, Trica D. 2006. Muslim Girls and the Other France. Race, Identity Politics & Social Exclusion. Bloomington: Indiana University.

15.

Kim Kyung-jun, Soo-Jung Lee, Hyun-a Kim, Jae-yeon Won and Sang-sok Yun. 2008. Jeonggyuhakkyo jaehak bukhanital cheonsonyeondeului jillotamsaeke gwanhan jiljeok yeongu (A Qualitative Research on the Path-Finding Process of Young North Korean migrants who are attending Public Schools), Seoul: Hangukcheongsonyeongeongchaekyeonguwon.

16.

Kim, Song-ok. 2009. “Bukhanitaljumine daehan eollonui bodo gyeonhyang yeongu (A Study on the Media Representation of North Korean Defectors).” M.A Thesis, Univerisity of North Korean Studies.

17.

Kyoyukinjeokjawonbu (Ministry of Education, Science and Technology). 2010. 2010nyeon talbukcheongsonyeon kyoyukjiwon chujingyehoek (2010 Plan of Educational Assistance for Youth from North Korea) https://www.hub4u.or.kr/databoard/list.do?category=5(accessed in January 30, 2011)

18.

Lee, Soo-Jung. 2006. “Divided Nation, Division Subjects: Separated Families in the Cold War and Post Cold War Eras. ” Ph. D. Dissertation, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.

19.

Oh, Sung-Bae. 2010. Damunhwa gyoyukjeongchekui gwajewa banghyang tamsaek (An Exploratory Study on Multicultural Education Policy: Its Challenges and Future Direction). Kyoyuksasangyeongu 24(21):149-70.

20.

Ong, Aihwa. 1996. Cultural Citizenship as Subject-Making: Immigrants Negotiate Racial and Cultural Boundaries in the United States. Current Anthropology 37(5):737-62.

21.

Park, Sun woong, Min-kyung Lee, Jonghwa Koo, and Gil-ja Park. 2010. Damunhwagyoyuk yeonguhakkyoui peurogeuraeme daehan bipanjeok bunseok (A Critical Analysis of Multicultural Programs in Multicultural Research Schools). Simingyoyukyeogu 42(2):29-60.

22.

Rosaldo, Renato. 2003. Introduction: The Borders of Belonging. In Cultural Citizenship in Island Southeast Asia. Ed. Renato Rosaldo. 1-15. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press.

23.

Suarez-Orozco, Marcelo. 2001. Globalization, Immigration, and Education: The Research Agenda. Havard Education Review 71(3):345-65.

24.

Valdes, Guadalupe. 1998. The World Outside and Inside Schools: Language and Immigrant Children. Educational Researcher 27(6):4-18.

25.

Yang, Kye-min, Jin-kyung Chung, and Hye-won Kang. 2008. Sahoetonghapeul wihan cheongsonyeon damunhwagyoyuk hwalseohwabangan yeongu (A Study of Methods of Revitalizing Multicultural Education for Youth’s Social Integration). Seoul: National Youth Policy Institute.

26.

Yoon, In-Jin. 2009. Bukhanijumin (North Korean Migrants). Seoul: Jimmundang.

The Review of Korean Studies