| This month, we will screen an edition of the KBS news show, ChooJeok 60 Boon (In-depth 60 minutes). For more about the program, read the excerpt from KBS, below. ■ WATCH THE VIDEO on our website by going to the VIDEO section of our ARCHJIVE. ■ ============ Title: In-Depth 60 Minutes Topic: The Nation Exporting Babies - Two Faces of Overseas Adoption Channel: KBS2 Original Broadcast: Wednesday, May 25th at 11pm |
| This month, we are pleased to welcome Yang Seung Ju, who became the MOGEF’s Director of Family Policy last year. In December, Ms. Yang spoke at a hearing held by Congresswoman Jang Hyang Sook, at which ASK members were also participants. She received her master’s and doctoral degrees in Agricultural Economics from Korea University and has been involved in fostering women’s development in Korea. There will be an informal discussion with Ms. Yang and time for your questions. This Forum will have Korean to English interpretation. |
| This month's Forum features demographer Dr. Peter Selman, Reader in Social Policy at the University of Newcastle upon Tyne in the UK. He is an expert on intercountry adoption and his paper, "The 'quiet migration' in the new millennium: Trends in Intercountry Adoption 1998-2003," can be found on this website in our ARCHIVE. |
| ASK was very happy to have the opportunity to listen to Mrs. Youngsook Park. Mrs. Park is the President and founder of the Korean Foster Care Association. She is also the director of public diplomacy at the Australian Embassy in Seoul. Her many civic involvements include serving on the boards of the Kyunggi Province Social Welfare Committee, the Korean Consumers Union and the Korean Volunteers Forum. Last year, Mrs. Park was appointed by the Prime Minister as the Korean Child Government Policy Coordinator. Korean Foster Care Association |
| This month, Yoo Kyung Hee of Korea Womenlink will talk with us about the current women's movement in Korea, the status of abolishing the hojuje (family registry system), and other issues. Ms. Yoo has been actively involved with Womenlink since 1992. Before becoming a representative of Womenlink this year, she participated in regional activism, co-op, and counseling activities. Ms. Yoo is currently the association representative of the Solidarity Network, a network of Korean NGOs, and the director of the Korea Women’s Associations United, a network of women’s organizations. She is also serving on policy advisory commissions for the Ministry of Gender Equality and Family, the Ministry of Justice, and the Korean National Police Agency. She’s very interested in the issues faced by single parent families and most of her activities have invovled addressing issues of gender, family, and the human rights of women. |
| Mr. Hong is an adoptive father and the creator of a net-based cybercafe called AntiBaby Export at http://cafe.daum.net/AntiBabyExport. Currently, the cafe has over 300 members. Along with his openly adopted 5 year old daughter, he has two sons 25 and 15 years old. He believes that adoption out of Korea needs to be discontinued, and the way he is working towards this end is to raise public awareness and demand better policies and solutions. He also believes that it's important to work with adoptees. Mr. Hong will be joined by the operator of AntiBaby Export Cafe, Im Hye-Young. She is a 3rd year student at Yonsei. |
| ASK is very happy to present the Director of Aeranwon, Han Sang Soon. Aeranwon is a home for single mothers which provides services such as housing, vocational training, and education in parenting skills. Prior to her involvement at Aeranwon, she worked for 7 years with Korean Christian Adoption Association, an organization that later merged with Holt Children's Services. Mrs. Han received her bachelor's and master's degrees in social work from Ewha Womens University. |
| Crossing Chasms is a video documentary about Jennifer Arndt, a Korean adoptee, who returns to her birth country seeking answers to the complex questions surrounding her adoption. In her search to define her identity, she walks through her past to understand the present. On this journey she meets other Korean adoptees who share their experiences as she tries to track down her own biological family. Through her own story and the testimonies of seven other adoptees, we learn about the complex issues facing Korean adoptees through their own voices. |
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| Mrs. Lee presented us with a lot of information about several topics that included sex education in the schools, teenage pregnancy and the few options presented to single mothers, and an overview of PPFK. |
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