2020-07-28

South Korean Social Movements, from democracy to civil society Editors: Gi-Wook Shin and Paul Y. Chang

South Korean Social Movements
From Democracy to Civil Society
Edited ByGi-Wook Shin, Paul Y Chang




from democracy to civil society
From Democracy to Civil Society:
The Evolution of South Korean Social Movements
Editors:
Gi-Wook Shin and Paul Y. Chang
(to be included in the Modern Korean Studies Book Series:
The Academy of Korean Studies and the Shorenstein Asia-Pacific Research Center, Stanford University)
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Ch1: Introduction: Democratization and the Evolution of Social Movements in Korea:
 Institutionalization and Diffusion
- Paul Y. Chang and Gi-Wook Shin
PART I: SOCIAL MOVEMENTS AND DEMOCRATIC TRANSITION
Ch 2: The Democracy Movement: an Empirical Overview
- Gi-Wook Shin, Paul Y. Chang, Jung-eun Lee and Sookyung Kim
Ch 3: From Minjung to the Simin: The Discursive Shift in Korean Democratic Movements
- Namhee Lee
Ch 4: Exorcizing the Ghosts of Kwangju: Policing Protest in the Post-Authoritarian Era
- Jong Bum Kwon
PART II: INSTITUTIONALIZATION OF SOCIAL MOVEMENTS
 Ch 5: Origins of the Human Rights Commission: Global and Domestic Causes
- Jeong Woo Koo
Ch 6: From the Streets to the Courts: PSPD’s Legal Strategy and the Institutionalization of
 Social Movements
- Joon Seok Hong
Ch 7: From the Margins to the Center: The Entry of Past Activists into the National Assembly
- Sookyung Kim and Paul Y. Chang
Ch 8: The Consequences of Government Funding for Environmental NGOs in Korea
- Chang Bum Ju
Ch 9: Causes and Consequences of Movement Institutionalization: The Case of the Women’s
 Movement in Korea
- Chan Suk Suh, Eun-Sil Oh and Yoon S. Choi
PART III: SPIN OFF MOVEMENTS AND DIFFUSION PROCESSES
Ch 10: Citizen Journalism: The Transformation of the Democratic Media Movement
- Thomas Kern and Sang-hui Nam
Ch 11: New Activist Cultural Production: Independent Filmmakers, the Post-Authoritarian State,
 and New Capital Flows in South Korea
- Young-a Park
Ch 12: The Korean Gay and Lesbian Movement: From ‘Identity’ and ‘Community’ to
 ‘Human Rights’
- Hyun-young Kwon Kim and John (Song Pae) Cho
Ch 13: Lawyers for a Democratic Society: The Case of Minbyun
- Patricia Goedde
Ch 14: Left Out: People’s Solidarity for Social Progress and the Evolution of Korean Minjung
 after Authoritarianism
- Alice Kim
BIBLIOGRAPHY
INDEX

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