Jennifer Chun and I have written our first paper together based on the collaborative research we’ve been doing on Korean temporary residents in Vancouver. We presented an early draft at the anthropology conference in Montreal a few months back, and we have since revised the paper with a focus on youth, work (especially “working holiday”), and mobile aspirations. Jennifer will be presenting the latest draft of this paper at the University of Illinois this weekend at a conference organized by a social science research lab called “the American University Meets the Pacific Century Project.” (see article)
Tag Archive for presentation
Beyond good intentions and evil regimes: North Koreans in Korean/American missionary custody
I’ll be giving a talk next week at the Centre for Women’s and Gender Studies at UBC. It’s an updated version of the talk I gave a couple of months ago at NYU, Rutgers, and UW, dealing with notions of missionary custody. As usual, I promise unconventional analysis, moving stories and even better visuals.
Centre for Women’s and Gender Studies, UBC
Spring 2011 Lecture Series
Wednesday, February 2nd, 2011
12:00 – 1:00 pm
At the Centre for Women’s and Gender Studies
2080 West Mall (028) Jack Bell Building
Everyone welcome!
Beyond good intentions and evil regimes: North Koreans in Korean/American missionary custody
Since the early 1990s, tens of thousands of North Koreans have left their famine-stricken homes in search of food and livelihood. Living without legal status in northeast China, many of these undocumented North Koreans — majority women — experience dire conditions including criminalization and forcible repatriation, slave wage labor, forced marriages, and sex work. In this bleak situation, South Korean and Korean American evangelical Christian missionaries and religious NGOs carry out significant humanitarian advocacy work in what has been described as an “underground railroad,” managing relations with state authorities and trafficking brokers, operating safe houses, and facilitating travel for those seeking asylum. However, with no systems for transparency or accountability in place, there is also growing concern for how these underground missionary networks regulate and discipline the expectations and experiences of North Korean border crossers in their custody. Drawing on interviews and ethnographic research of evangelical missions, this talk will present questions about intentionality and power, and discuss the legal-ethical-spatial politics of the safe house, touted as both temporary and necessary.
Geography Colloquium, UBC on Nov 9
I’m giving a colloquium talk in the geography department at UBC on Tuesday, November 9. Unlike the North Korea-focused talks I’ve been giving lately, this one is about the Korean missionaries who were taken hostage in Afghanistan in 2007. I must have been preoccupied with the idea of “intention” when I wrote the abstracts for these talks — they’re all titled “beyond good intentions,” when in fact, they should just be called “beyond intentions.”

The Hankyoreh editorial cartoon, August 30, 2007. Hostages, troops, and missionaries leave Afghanistan, with two dead.
Tuesday, November 9, 2010, 12:30pm
Beyond Good Intentions: Geopolitics and Korean evangelical missions in Afghanistan
Department of Geography, University of British Columbia
Geography Room 212
A group of twenty-three South Korean evangelicals made worldwide headlines in 2007 when they were taken hostage by the Taliban for nearly six weeks in Afghanistan. Two men were killed, and the rest were eventually released — after the South Korean government pledged to withdraw its troops and ban any further proselytizing activities by Korean evangelicals in Afghanistan. While critics pointed to the hostage situation as indicative of misguided missionary zeal and recklessness, mission advocates insisted that the hostages should be described instead as “church volunteers” or “humanitarian aid workers,” and that similar relief missions be allowed to continue. Drawing from ethnographic research and interviews, I will discuss how Korean/American missionaries contend with demands for internationalism and tolerance in “Islam missions” and “frontier missions” in the context of war and neocolonialism.
Korean Studies Colloquium, U of Washington on Nov 4
I’m giving a Korean studies colloquium talk at the Center for Korean Studies at the University of Washington in Seattle next week. My talk at NYU was announced over the Alliance of Scholars Concerned about Korea (ASCK) list, and I think that’s how the folks at the University of Washington heard about my work. Although it’s very last minute — and even though I’m working on a different talk at UBC on November 9 — this will be an opportunity to improve my arguments on the “space of custody,” incorporating the wonderful feedback I received from all the smart critical folks at Rutgers and NYU.
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Thursday, November 4, 2010, 3:30pm
Beyond Good Intentions and Evil Regimes: North Koreans in Korean/American Missionary Custody
The Henry M. Jackson School of International Studies, University of Washington
Denny Hall 314 (email uwcks@uw.edu for more information)
Since the early 1990s, tens of thousands of North Koreans have left their famine-stricken homes in search of food and livelihood. Living without legal status in northeast China, the majority of these undocumented North Koreans are women, many of whom are trafficked into sex work or forced marriages. In this bleak situation, South Korean and Korean American evangelical Christian missionaries and religious NGOs carry out significant humanitarian advocacy work, dealing with state authorities and trafficking brokers, operating safe houses, and making travel arrangements for those seeking asylum. But with no systems for transparency or accountability in place, there is also concern for how the missionary networks regulate and discipline the expectations and experiences of North Korean border crossers in their custody. Drawing on interviews and ethnographic research on Korean/American evangelical missions, Dr. Han I will discuss how the missionary networks raise questions about intention, power, and the politics of custody.
Korean Studies Colloquium, NYU on October 25
The New York trip has become a bit of a speaking tour. I’ve agreed to give another lecture while I’m there — a Korean Studies Colloquium talk at NYU on Monday night. It’s on the missionary rescue narrative surrounding undocumented North Korean migrants in China, the same topic as the shorter lecture I’m doing at Rutgers, but for a more knowledgeable audience, so I’ll have to put more work into it. It should be of interest to students, academics and activists interested in religion, humanitarianism, and Korea/diaspora politics.
Monday, October 25 2010, 7pm
“Beyond good intentions and evil regimes: North Koreans in Korean/American missionary custody“
Silver Center, Room 208
62 Waverly Place, New York
Korean Studies Colloquium @ New York University
Since the early 1990s, tens of thousands of North Koreans have left their famine-stricken homes in search of food and livelihood. Living without legal status in northeast China, over 70% of these North Koreans are women, many of whom are trafficked into sex work or forced marriages. In this bleak situation, South Korean and Korean American evangelical Christian missionaries and religious NGOs carry out significant humanitarian advocacy work. But with no systems for transparency or accountability in place, there is also concern for how the missionary networks regulate and discipline the expectations and experiences of North Korean border crossers in their custody. Drawing on interviews and ethnographic research on Korean/American evangelical missions, Dr. Han will discuss how the missionary networks raise questions about intentionality and custody.