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Rights Claiming in South Korea

Edited by: Celeste L. Arrington, Patricia Goedde

ISBN13: 9781108841337
Published: May 2021
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Hardback
Price: £99.99



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Although rights-based claims are diversifying and opportunities and resources for claims-making have improved, obtaining rights protections and catalysing social change in South Korea remain challenging processes. This volume examines how different groups in South Korea have defined and articulated grievances and mobilized to remedy them. It explores developments in the institutional contexts within which rights claiming occurs and in the sources of support available for utilizing different claims-making channels. Drawing on scores of original interviews, readings of court rulings and statutes, primary archival and digital sources, and interpretive analysis of news media coverage in Korean, this volume illuminates rights in action. The chapters uncover conflicts over contending rights claims, expose disparities between theory and practice in the law, trace interconnections among rights-based movements, and map emerging trends in the use of rights language. Case studies examine the rights of women, workers, people with disabilities, migrants, and sexual minorities.

Subjects:
Other Jurisdictions , Asia
Contents:
Introduction: rights in action
Patricia Goedde and Celeste L. Arrington
Part I. Rights in Historical Perspective:
1. Legal disputes, women's legal voice, and petitioning rights in late Joseon Korea
Jisoo M. Kim
2. Defying claims of legal incompetence: women's lawsuits over separate property rights in colonial Korea
Sungyun Lim
3. 'Equal' second-class citizens: post-colonial democracy and women's rights in post-liberation South Korea
Eunkyung Kim
Part II. Institutional Mechanisms for Rights Claiming:
4. A clash of claims: the diversity and effectiveness of rights claims around the Jeju 4.3 events
Hun Joon Kim
5. Advancing human rights, advancing a nation: becoming a Seonjinguk via the national human rights commission of Korea
Soo-Young Hwang
6. The constitutional court as a facilitator of fundamental rights claiming in Korea, 1988–2018
Hannes B. Mosler
7. Rights claiming through the courts: changing legal opportunity structures in South Korea
Celeste L. Arrington
8. Public interest lawyering in South Korea: trends in institutional development
Patricia Goedde
Part III. Mobilizing Rights for the marginalized:
9. From 'we are not machines, we are humans' to 'we are workers, we want to work': the changing notion of labour rights in Korea, the 1980s-the 2000s
Yoonkyung Lee
10. From invisible beneficiaries to independent rights-holders: how the disability rights movement changed the law and Korean society
JaeWon Kim
11. The politics of postponement and sexual minority rights in South Korea
Ju Hui Judy Han
12. Discovering diversity: the anti-discrimination legislation movement in South Korea
Jihye Kim and Sung Soo Hong
Part IV. Shaping Rights for New and Non-citizens:
13. The rights of non-citizenship: migrant rights and hierarchies in South Korea
Erin Aeran Chung
14. Claiming citizenship: rights claiming and recognition for North Koreans entering South Korea
Sheena Chestnut Greitens
Conclusion: findings and future directions
Celeste L. Arrington and Patricia Goedde
Index