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      • KCI등재후보

        The Clash between Social Policy and Traditional Values: Unmet Welfare Needs Sustained by the Culture of Familismin South Korea

        Ruth Phillips,정용문 한국사회복지학회 2013 Asian Social Work and Policy Review Vol.7 No.1

        Drawing from a wider study of the ideas of poverty and inequality in South Korea, this paperreports on the lived experiences of disadvantaged South Koreans and their relationship to theNational Basic Livelihood Security System (NBLSS), a flagship social assistance program aimed ataddressing poverty and inequality. Utilizing a cultural approach to understanding and analysingpolicy responses to poverty, the impact of familism in the application of the NBLSS safety net isexamined. Research data is presented through the testimonies, obtained through qualitativeresearch interviews, of disadvantaged research participants and those who work with them, as wellas policy-makers’ perspectives, revealing key flaws in the current NBLSS policy objectives. It isclearly evident that, by clinging to outdated Confucian conceptualizations of familial piety as a justificationfor highly selectivist access to what is no more than a subsistence level of financial supportfor poor people, the proposition of a poverty safety net is compromised and is widely missing itsaim of reducing poverty and inequality in contemporary South Korea.

      • KCI등재

        Multiculturalism and social cohesion: A Japanese community’s perceptions of “being Australian”

        Funaki Shinsuke,Hamano Takeshi,Phillips Ruth 한국사회복지학회 2021 Asian Social Work and Policy Review Vol.15 No.1

        Based on a large-scale survey conducted with parents from Japanese language schools in Sydney in 2015, this paper aims to review multiple dimensions of social cohesion in the Japanese ethnic community in Australia. Looking at several indices such as economic, political, and cultural integration, the paper describes the social profile of the Japanese ethnic community, questioning the generic perception of the community as a coherent body of middle-class migrants in Australia. This was achieved through a comparative analysis with outcomes of a national survey of the Australian population on social cohesion and draws attention to the ways in which a particular sense of social cohesion with Australian society is constructed by Japanese migrants. The study found a differentiated sense of belonging to the local community, country of residence (Australia), and nation of origin (Japan). It found communal diversity in the Japanese community resulting from there being a majority of women migrants who were part of cross-border marriages and their children living in multicultural family circumstances. It was concluded that this configuration within the community leads to advocacy related to a re-identification as a possible ethnic group of migrants that should be recognized in an inclusive migration settlement policy in Australia.

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