Korea Program

Prgm
ksp
Acronym
Korea Program
Add parent domain ID to this domain content
1
Logo
Korea Program Logo
Centers Data
Scope
Research Mainpage
Content

The Korea Program offers courses, hosts seminars and conferences, and conducts research projects on contemporary Korea and issues related to the Korean Peninsula.

Scope
Media Guide
Content

The Media Guide of the Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies contains a list of policy experts and their areas of expertise available to media for comments and background information.

Scope
Home Header
People Directory Layout
Full
Meta Description
KSP conducts multidisciplinary research projects in which Stanford faculty members collaborate with American and Asian colleagues.
Body

Shorenstein APARC's Korea Program, begun in September 2000 and led by Gi-Wook Shin, features weekly luncheon seminars on Korea-related issues, from war reporting to health care to democracy. Heavily attended by students and faculty alike, the series is often standing-room-only.

As part of his mission to build awareness of Korean Studies at Stanford, regularly teaches both undergraduates and graduates, through the department of sociology. His most recent course offerings are Korean State and Society and Asia-Pacific Transformation. Focusing on society and politics in twentieth-century Korea and the rise of Asia after World War II, both classes introduced students to the forces of colonialism, nationalism, democratization, and globalization that have shaped modern Korea in particular and contemporary Asia in general. Shin also taught a Korean Studies Workshop in fall 2002.

Shin is also actively fundraising to support the new program, engaging in collaborative projects with Korean institutions, pursuing his own research activities. In February 2003, he organized a landmark conference, "North Korea: New Challenges, New Solutions", which included scholars and policymakers from the United States, Japan, China, and Russia, as well as South Korea. Conference participants produce a policy brief, which Shorenstein APARC published in April 2003, and which was subsequently presented to the Roh government in South Korea, and the governments in Tokyo and Washington, D.C.