Immigration and the Boundaries of Social Citizenship in East Asia: Theoretical Considerations in a Comparative Perspective
Abstract
Welfare systems in South Korea, Japan, and Taiwan were traditionally geared towards economic growth and productivity, rather than focusing on social rights. However, with increasing social policy commitments and migratory inflows in recent years, questions of who is deserving what in redistributive terms are increasingly relevant for these welfare latecomers, as it has been the case for European welfare states. By connecting discourses on social citizenship in East Asia to broader theoretical debates, this study aims to provide some conceptual instruments for a deeper analysis of social rights in this region in the face of increasing immigration trends. It is suggested that the lack of a differentiation between the ideas of status, identity, and social rights may lead to an ethnocentric understanding of social citizenship, which ill fits with the human rights perspective.
Keywords:
social citizenship, immigration, East Asia, welfare stateAcknowledgments
Previous ideas and drafts have been presented in the annual conferences of East Asian Social Policy (EASP), IMISCOE and ESPAnet Italia during summer 2014, and the Japanese Association of Social Policy Studies (JASPS) in June 2015. I owe thanks to Juan Carlos Trivino for his comments on an earlier manuscript. All flaws and imperfections in the paper fall under the sole responsibility of the author.
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Biographical Note
Ijin Hong earned a combined B.A. and M.A. degree in Sociology and Political Institutions in “La Sapienza” University in Rome, Italy (2006), and a PhD in Social Welfare in Yonsei University, Seoul (2011). She is currently Research Professor at the Institute for Welfare State Research (ISWR) in Yonsei University. Her main research interests include comparative social policy, labor market and immigration. Email: ijinhong@hotmail.com