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Abstract
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Keywords
To examine an exceptional case of international labor solidarity and advocacy in a nontraditional labor-receiving country of South Korea.
Abstract
Purpose
To examine an exceptional case of international labor solidarity and advocacy in a nontraditional labor-receiving country of South Korea.
Methodology/approach
Ethnographic research on migrant advocacy organization in Korea from its inception in the mid-1990s to the present; theoretical and comparative review of literature on migrant labor mobilization, with a focus on labor unions and migrant advocacy organizations.
Findings
The significance of the Korean case is that there are an unusually high number of migrant advocacy organizations that increasingly espouse an internationalist ideology. Furthermore, their effectiveness and sustainability rest on embedded solidarity networks across a spectrum of progressive labor and civic organizations.
Originality/Value
The chapter underscores the agentic power of society’s vulnerable populations, such as undocumented immigrant workers, despite the market-driven forces of globalization that disrupts communities and disciplines workers. Embedded solidarity with migrants from a transnational perspective adds to the much-needed discussion about global protests in the context of globalization and neoliberalism.
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