1st Edition
Contested Citizenship in East Asia Developmental Politics, National Unity, and Globalization
Introduction: East Asia and Citizenship by Chang Kyung-Sup and Bryan S. Turner Part I: East Asia and Citizenship in Perspective 1. National and Social Citizenship: Some Structural and Cultural Problems with Modern Citizenship by Bryan S. Turner 2. Colonialism, Revolution, Development: A Historical Perspective on Citizenship in Political Struggles in Eastern Asia by Arif Dirlik 3. Different Beds, One Dream? State–Society Relationships and Citizenship Regimes in East Asia by Chang Kyung-Sup Part II: China, Taiwan, Hong Kong 4. Community Citizens or Egoistic Men: Property Rights Activism in China’s New Urban Neighbourhoods by Ching Kwan Lee and Peng Chen 5. Corporate Citizenship in Contemporary China: Social Responsibility for Saving Jobs by Gu Shengzu, Yang Wei, and Hong Qunlian 6. Transnational or Compatriotic Bourgeoisie? Taiwanese Entrepreneurs and their Contested Citizenship Across the Taiwan Strait by Hsiu-hua Shen 7. The Making of Citizenship in a Divided Nation: Neoliberal Citizenship in Hong Kong and National Citizenship in China by Alvin Y. So and Su Xianjia Part III: Japan and Koreas 8. Social Citizenship in Action: Gender and Political Economy of Social-Care Policy Reforms in Japan by Ito Peng 9. The Growth and Erosion of Japanese Identity in Ryukyu: a Citizenship Perspective by Choe Hyun 10. Developmental Citizenship in Perspective: The South Korean Case and Beyond by Chang Kyung-Sup 11. The Emergence of the ‘Multicultural Family’ and Genderized Citizenship in South Korea by Kim Hyun Mee 12. Circumstantial Citizens: North Korean ‘Migrants’ in South Korea by Yoon In-Jin Part IV: Conclusion 13. Whither East Asian Citizenship? by Bryan S. Turner and Chang Kyung-Sup. Index.
Biography
Kyung-Sup Chang is Professor of Sociology and Director of the Institute for Social Development and Policy Research at Seoul National University. His research interests include: developmental politics and social policy, comparative modernities (compressed modernity), post-socialist transitions in Asia. His work on these issues has appeared in journals including Economy and Society, World Development, Journal of Development Studies, International Sociology. He is also author of South Korea under Compressed Modernity: Familial Political Economy in Transition (Routledge, 2010).
Bryan Turner is the Presidential Professor of Sociology and the Director of the Committee on Religion at the City University of New York. He has published extensively in this area, and books include Muslims in Singapore (Routledge, 2009), and The Body in Asia (Berghahn, 2010). He has also edited The Routledge International Handbook of Globalization Studies (Routledge, 2010), The Routledge Handbook of Body Studies (Routledge, 2012), and is the founding editor of Citizenship Studies.





