Coronavirus Worsens Korea-Japan Tensions
The South Korean government’s responses to Japan’s new travel restrictions suggest that bilateral relations have not recovered from tensions last year.
The South Korean government’s responses to Japan’s new travel restrictions suggest that bilateral relations have not recovered from tensions last year.
South Korea’s e-governance may be leaving older adults who are most at risk of COVID-19 uninformed of critical announcements.
Traditional attitudes towards childcare limit the effectiveness of public policy measures that seek to protect children from accidents.
Japanese perceptions of security threats suggests that Tokyo would find public support for an effort to improve relations with Seoul.
Politicians are trying to garner attention by advancing measures that would contain the coronavirus, but the impact of the virus on public opinion may be overstated.
There are already indications that Korea’s tourism industry will be hit harder by the coronavirus than by prior infectious diseases such as SARS and MERS.
Civilian participation in disseminating information on the coronavirus reveals the unintended benefits of public investment in software education.
Coronavirus is changing the labor-management relationship in major Korean retail companies as public policy focus turns to minimizing the economic fallout of the epidemic.
Interview of Professor Kim Dong-chun SungKongHoe University by KEI Non-Resident Fellow Emanuel Pastreich on the coronavirus.
Building on steady gains over the past decade, the North Korean defector community in South Korea is mobilizing to break down more barriers.