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Is the multicultural state a doomed project in South Korea and Japan? (LSESU Korean Society Lectures)

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Is the multicultural state a doomed project in South Korea and Japan? (LSESU Korean Society Lectures)

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While there is a common view that multiculturalism in South Korea and Japan is not possible, experts argue that discussing the issue is a positive change. What do you think about this issue? Is multiculturalism possible in Japan and/or South Korea?

This debate is a follow up of the lecture “Constructing the Multicultural States in South Korea & Japan: Chimera or Reality” by Professor Timothy Lim (31st January 2015) at The London School of Economics and Political Science as part of the LSESU Korean Society Annual Lecture Series. Timothy Lim is a professor of political science at California State University, Los Angeles.

Multiculturalism in Japan and South Korea?

In the eyes of many observers, multiculturalism in South Korea and Japan cannot prosper. They claim that, to the extent that cultural diversity exists, it is little more than a state-dominated effort to efficiently control and manage increasing ethnic diversity, primarily to serve the "developmental" needs of the country. They do not see the current policies of inclusion leading to the development of a genuine multicultural state—that is, a state in which the rights of minority or subordinated ethnic groups are meaningfully incorporated into the institutions of the state, and in which those groups, especially immigrants, can acquire citizenship or basic rights as permanent residents (among other factors).

However, there is a counterargument to the above view on cultural diversity in South Korea and Japan. Professor Timothy Lim argues in part that the mere emergence of a multicultural discourse, even in a very constrained form, is itself an important change. This new discourse has introduced a new cultural logic into both societies, one that problematizes the still-dominant—but no longer exclusive—national identity discourse built around racial and ethnic purity.

What do you think? Is the multicultural state a doomed project in South Korea and Japan or can multiculturalism thrive in what have been two of the world’s most “homogenous” nation-state?

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