Print

Print


CALL FOR CONFERENCE PROPOSALS



 “Dynamic Korea in a Transforming Asia: Opportunities and Challenges

for South Korean Development.”



April 18-19, 2013

Copenhagen Business School, Copenhagen, Denmark.





The Asia Research Centre (ARC) of the Department of Economics and
Management at Copenhagen Business School is organizing a conference on
contemporary Korea. The conference is co-sponsored by the Academy of Korean
Studies in Seoul.



South Korea’s economic development trajectory is legendary. From a poor,
impoverished, colonized, and war-ravaged economy, this small republic has
rapidly transformed itself to a dynamic and prosperous one. There are many
reasons behind such a favorable development. These include early land
reforms, education and infrastructure, an effective (albeit authoritarian)
state determined to effectively exploit its only resource (labor), through
exports of labor-intensive goods, and an industrial compulsion driven by
security concerns emanating from North Korea. This has been furthered by an
ongoing emphasis on industrial upgrading through learning by doing,
research and development, and tertiary education. Politically, South Korea
has also matured, from the chaotic years in the 1950s to a more ordered,
authoritarian government of the 1960s to the 1980s, to the relatively
free-wheeling democratic society of today. Asia, too, has changed, first
with rapid industrialization in Japan, the development of other high
performing Asian economies such as Taiwan, Singapore, and Hong Kong
accompanying Korean change, and now with the high-growth economies of China
and India. This regional transformation is vast, deep, and globally
unprecedented, so much so that the twenty-first century is said to belong
to Asia.



The conference aims to capture capitalist Korea’s engagement with, and
challenges from, contemporary Asia and thus engage leading Korea scholars,
researchers, and policy makers from Korea, Asia, and the rest of the world.
ARC is a leading institution in Asian Studies in the Scandinavian region,
and is home to a number of political economists and business studies
scholars who specialize on China, Japan, India, and South East Asia. Given
the specific mandate of ARC to promote the understanding of a dynamic Asian
region in the twenty-first century, ARC is well positioned to undertake
wide-ranging scholarly and strategic business and policy conversations with
an international group of Korea scholars, to discuss and debate the
changing relationship of Korea with a transforming Asia.


To understand Korea’s dynamism in the wider Asian context, we propose a
discussion of “regional interaction and integration” (RII).  Interaction
refers to the on-going, dynamic relationships between Korea and other
countries in Asia. The more intense the interaction, the greater is the
degree of integration between the two parties. The task of this conference
is to unravel and explain the growing interactions between Korea and the
principal countries in Asia, either at a bilateral level or at a
multilateral regional level. Asia includes more narrowly the major
economies of East Asia, South East Asia, and South Asia. (For greater
manageability, we exclude West Asia and Oceania, acknowledging that they
are important to South Korea.) We confine interaction and integration
principally to four broad areas. These are a) region-based, geo-economic
relationships, b) specific business, sectoral, and technological
engagements with Asia, c) Korea’s responses to emergent challenges and
opportunities associated with Korea’s ongoing engagement with the region,
and d) Asia’s responses to Korean strategies and developments. This
conference deliberately skirts the security-based international relations
involving North Korea. Below we provide an indicative list of possible
topics for further development and analysis under the rubric of “regional
interaction and integration.” These themes will bring out Korea’s dynamism,
its engagement with Asia, and Asian responses to Korea at bilateral or
regional levels.

1)      How is South Korea politically interacting with a dynamic Asia in
the twenty-first century? Given that the economic engine of the world
economy has gravitated toward Asia, what are the geopolitical underpinnings
of Korea’s gradual realignment with Asia? How does it view its political
relationships with China, Japan, and India for example? Are there new
strategic economic and business partnerships emerging with respect to Korea
and what are the reasons for this development?



2)      What are the economic, business, and technology strategies of
leading Korean firms in Asian countries, including but not limited to
China, India, and Japan? Given the increasing maturity of the Korean
economy, how is the Korean economy restructuring itself and to what degree
are Asian economies, bilaterally or regionally, contributing to this
restructuring process? For example, to what extent does Korea’s industrial
upgrading involve the offshoring of manufacturing production to Asian
countries? Are bilateral economic partnerships with Asian countries
consistent with the regionalization of the Korean economy? Are there
particular economic and industrial sectors in which Korean businesses are
investing? What are the strategic implications on the Korean development
trajectory for such investments? How are Korean businesses coping with new
technological and investment competition from China, Japan, and others in
Asian markets? In order to integrate more closely with Asia, is South Korea
trying to attract investments, which goes against its own historical
reluctance to rely on FDI?



3)      What are the principal impediments to and opportunities for the
Korean economy and business to maintain strong ties to Asian economies?
While economic growth in China and India and subsequent liberalization act
to pull in Korean exports, investments, and technologies for both local
markets and resource-seeking reasons, what are the implications on Korean
employment at home? How do Korean businesses tackle foreign workers or for
that matter cope with political opposition faced from tribal populations
and NGOs to foreign investments as in the case of Pohang Iron and Steel
Company’s (POSCO) intended investments in Indian mines and a large steel
plant? How is Korea coping with its demographic transition? Is it preparing
itself to integrate more deeply with Asian workers and high-skilled
professionals by facilitating both temporary and permanent immigration? Is
it internationalizing its education system with foreign students knowing
well that Japan, its next-door neighbor, is in a state of crisis for its
inability to interface adequately with the world economy? What is the
nature of state-business strategy in tackling this emerging problem? How is
it competing with Asian countries such as Japan and Taiwan in high
technology sectors?



Given the multifaceted nature of the subject, we do not propose any
particular methodology. In fact, we encourage interdisciplinary approaches,
which are historically sensitive, raise interesting theoretical questions
on the changing relationship between Korea and Asia, and are empirically
rich. Those working on other Asian economies with strong Korea interests
are particularly welcome to participate in the conference. Participants
will have advanced training as well as distinguished careers as political
economists, sociologists, economists, economic geographers, political
scientists, business and technology scholars, industry, labor, and regional
specialists, and other related fields. We expect a good mix of senior,
mid-career, and upcoming scholars from Korea, Asia, the US, and Europe.



Proposals, covering the following topics, have been selected:

·         Korean patents and technology competition in Asia

·         Environment and Korea’s new developmentalism in Asia

·         Indian responses to Korean investments

·         Industrial relations of Korean businesses in Asia

·         Korea’s globalization in an Asian neoliberal context

·         Korea’s financial integration in the region

·         Asian migrants in Korea

·         Korea’s economic integration with Asia



We are looking for contributors who can complement the above themes in
interesting ways, but also propose something novel about contemporary Korea
and its relationships within Asia. Papers covering immigration from Asia to
Korea, labor market shifts in Korea and their implications for Asia,
science and technology policies and collaborations (or competition) with
Asian countries, trade and patent conflicts, state-business partnership or
economic nationalism in Korea and its impact on Asia, and Asian responses
to Korean investments, exports, and labor management are especially welcome.



Those interested in participating must provide a title, 400-word abstract,
and a one-page CV with a list of recent publications by October 15, 2013 to:



Anthony P. D’Costa, Conference Organizer

Professor of Indian Studies and Research Director

Asia Research Centre

E-mail: [log in to unmask] and cc to "Lene Krarup Laursen"
[log in to unmask]



If selected, complete papers are due March 25, 2013. Overall fit with the
conference, quality, and balance of topics will be the main criteria. The
number of participants is limited due to budgetary constraints, regional
representations, and balance of topics. However, those selected will
receive support for a round-trip economy class fare, excellent local
lodging for two or three nights, and most meals. No other support is
available.



The intended paper must be original, not previously published, and not
under consideration anywhere else. The Asia Research Centre at CBS will
have the first right of rejection as an edited volume or a special issue of
a journal will be published. For a recent example of a conference volume,
see:

* *

*GLOBALIZATION AND ECONOMIC NATIONALISM IN ASIA*
*http://tinyurl.com/9lpxma2* <http://tinyurl.com/9lpxma2>**

* *

Additional conference details will be posted as they become available, at:



www.cbs.dk/dkta




-- 
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Anthony P. D'Costa
Professor of Indian Studies and Research Director
Asia Research Centre
Copenhagen Business School
Porcelænshavens 24B, 3.78
DK-2000 Frederiksberg, Denmark
Ph: +45 3815 2572

*GLOBALIZATION AND ECONOMIC NATIONALISM IN ASIA***
*http://tinyurl.com/9lpxma2
**
**A NEW INDIA?*
<http://www.anthempress.com/index.php/a-new-india-1.html>*
http://www.anthempress.com/pdf/9780857285041.pdf*

http://uk.cbs.dk/arc
http://www.thisismodernindia.com/this_is_modern_india_about_us.html
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

____
AIB-L is brought to you by the Academy of International Business.
For information: http://aib.msu.edu/community/aib-l.asp
To post message: [log in to unmask]
For assistance:  [log in to unmask]
AIB-L is a moderated list.