• Title/Summary/Keyword: Visas

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Start-Up Visa: Rethinking Entrepreneurship and Human Capital in Immigration Policy

  • Istad, Felicia
    • Asian Journal of Innovation and Policy
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    • v.11 no.1
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    • pp.30-49
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    • 2022
  • As industrialized countries transition into knowledge economies, there is a rising demand for talent and innovation. Support for start-ups through incubation, acceleration, and venture capital has turned into a key area of investment, with public and private actors searching for the next unicorn. This article examines start-up visas as an emerging policy tool in the global competition for highly innovative entrepreneurs. The study builds on a sample of eight national start-up immigration programs and applies human-capital citizenship (Ellermann, 2020) as a guiding framework. The article first proposes a conceptualization of start-up visas, suggesting that innovation and entrepreneurship also be considered in the theorization of skills. Second, the study examines the implications of start-up visas for international mobility. By focusing on the logic of entry requirements and subsequent benefits accrued through the status as a start-up founder, the findings of this study highlight the role of start-up visas in expanding privileged pathways to cross-border mobility. The article concludes with a discussion of implications for policy and research concerned with the international mobility of start-ups

Main Reasons and Decision-Making Process for Marriage Migration of Vietnamese Women (베트남 국제결혼 여성의 혼인이주 원인 및 의사결정과정)

  • Song, Yoo-Jean
    • The Korean Journal of Community Living Science
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    • v.19 no.4
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    • pp.581-595
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    • 2008
  • This study attempts to provide the main reasons and decision-making processes for marriage migration from a Vietnamese' perspective. For this purpose, in-depth interviews were conducted in Vietnam. Interviewees are those who got married to foreigners but are waiting for visas and parents whose daughters are marriage migrants. According to 23 interviewees, the main reasons of marriage migration are as follows: individual aspiration, sacrifice for others, and the circumstantial effects or love. Individual aspiration, in particular, leads to an active pursuit of international marriage. Parental involvement in the decision-making process is rarely found. Decision seems to be wholly made by the female migrant herself based on an individualistic orientation.

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The Feasibility of Reciprocal Health Care Agreements between South Korea and Australia (상호의료협약에 대한 고찰 -호주와 한국의 상호의료협약 가능성을 중심으로-)

  • Lee, Hyo-Young;Park, Eun-Ok
    • The Korean Journal of Health Service Management
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    • v.11 no.4
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    • pp.225-237
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    • 2017
  • Objectives : This study reviews the feasibility of Reciprocal Health Care Agreements (RHCA) between South Korea and Australia. Methods : A literature review was conducted using government reports and media articles. Results : In Australia, the Health Insurance Act enables health care agreements with other nations, but Korea has no similar legislation in place. Therefore, Korea must build a broader consensus on the need for RHCA, based on the precedent of Australia's RHCA with 11 nations, as well as on the Korean Pension Act, which has made reciprocal pension agreements with 28 nations through an exceptive clause. The active government involvement of the Ministry of Health and the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade in Australia, and the Ministry of Health & Welfare and Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Korea, are essential for a successful RHCA process. Conclusions : RHCA between Australia and Korea would constitute a significant step forward in strengthening people-to-people links between these two trading partners in the spirit of health diplomacy.

Production of Mycoplasma-Free Jujube Trees through In vitro Micrografting (기내미세접목(器內微細接木)에 의(依)한 대추나무의 마이코플라즈마 무병주(無病株) 생산(生産))

  • Park, Jae In
    • Journal of Korean Society of Forest Science
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    • v.82 no.3
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    • pp.254-259
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    • 1993
  • For the production of mycoplasma-free jujube trees from mycoplasma-infected trees in vitro micrografting visas carried out using apical meristems of in vitro grown plantlets as scions. The rootstocks were hypocotyl segments of in vitro germinated seedlings of Zizyphus jujuba Mill. which is widely used as rootstocks in the field grafting. Ten percent of scions showed normal growth and grew into plants. The presence of mycoplasma was tested using transmission electron microscopy and fluorescence microscopy. Mycoplasma was not found in the tissues of scion parts and seedlings, whereas it was found in in vitro grown plantlets. This suggests that the production of mycoplasmaa-free jujube trees is possible by the in vitro micrografting technique.

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The Effects of Job Training Programs on the Employment and Wages of Immigrants in Korea (직업훈련이 외국인력의 고용과 임금에 미치는 영향)

  • Kim, Hyejin;Lee, Chulhee
    • Economic Analysis
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    • v.27 no.2
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    • pp.41-70
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    • 2021
  • Using the 2017 and 2019 Survey on Immigrants' Living Conditions and Labour Force, we examine how the job training programs in Korea affect immigrants' labor market outcomes by applying the propensity score matching method. The results show that job training programs increase the probability of being employed by 6.4 percentage points and positively affect monthly wages. There is significant heterogeneity in the effects of job training effects across visa categories. For immigrants with work visas, the effect on the employment rate is relatively small, while the wage effect is considerably large. On the other hand, we do not find a positive wage effect for marriage migrants. Both the employment rate and the monthly wage increased through job training for permanent residents.

North Korea, Apparel Production Networks and UN Sanctions: Resilience through Informality (북한 의류 생산네트워크와 UN 제재)

  • Lee, Jong-Woon;Gray, Kevin
    • Journal of the Economic Geographical Society of Korea
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    • v.23 no.4
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    • pp.373-394
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    • 2020
  • The strengthening of multilateral international sanctions against North Korea has raised questions as to how effective they are in exerting pressure on the country's economy. In this paper, we address this question by examining their impact on the country's integration into regional and global apparel production networks. North Korea has in the past decade become an increasingly competitive exporter of apparel on the basis of consignment-based processing arrangements. Official trade data shows a sharp drop in North Korean exports of clothing since the sectoral ban in 2017. There is evidence to suggest, however, that exports have continued on a more informal and clandestine basis. North Korea's integration into apparel production networks has also taken the form of the dispatch of workers to factories in China's northeastern border regions. Yet there is evidence that the recent sanctions imposed on such practices has similarly led to illicit practices such as working on visitors' visas, often with the help of Chinese enterprises and local government. The resilience of North Korea's integration into apparel production networks follows a capitalist logic and is result of the highly profitable nature of apparel production for all actors concerned and a correspondingly strong desire to evade sanctions. As such, the analysis contributes to the literature on sanctions that suggests that the measures may contribute to emergence of growing informal and illicit practices and to the role of the clandestine economy.

Case Study of Application of Global Industrial Technology Curriculum for International Students - Focusing on J College - (외국인 유학생의 글로벌 산업기술 교육과정 적용 사례 연구 -J 대학을 중심으로-)

  • Song, Yujin;Lee, Jongkil
    • Journal of Practical Engineering Education
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    • v.13 no.3
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    • pp.461-471
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    • 2021
  • This study investigated the application and satisfaction of the global industrial technology curriculum for foreign students at J University in Korea. In order to derive the global industrial technology curriculum, industry needs were analyzed, and the appropriateness of the curriculum was identified through the current status of the root industry. In order to investigate the satisfaction with the application of the global industrial technology curriculum, a questionnaire survey was conducted in the form of an in-person interview for two months from August to September 2021 for foreign students. The questionnaire surveys included general information of the subjects, the status of completion of the curriculum, questions about class satisfaction, the process of obtaining certifications, and whether or not they were employed. As a result of the study, the reasons for choosing the curriculum of the respondents were their interest in subjects related to the root industry (welding, machining, etc.) and the issuance of Korean employment and visas (E-7). The most preferred subject was welding practice at 36.8%, and in terms of subjects considered necessary, the subject of basic major terminology was the most at 29.2%. The difference in satisfaction between graduates and current students who applied the same curriculum was tested, and as a result of the analysis, it was confirmed that there was no difference in satisfaction between current students and graduates through the t test (significance level p=0.05). We believe that this study is meaningful in that it provides basic data for the domestic industrial technology curriculum for foreign students and suggests the direction of related research in a time when the existence of universities is threatened due to the decrease in the school-age population.

Factors and Elements for Cross-border Entrepreneurial Migration: An Exploratory Study of Global Startups in South Korea (델파이 기법과 AHP를 이용한 글로벌 창업이주 요인 탐색 연구: 국내 인바운드 사례를 중심으로)

  • Choi, Hwa-joon;Kim, Tae-yong;Lee, Jungwoo
    • Asia-Pacific Journal of Business Venturing and Entrepreneurship
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    • v.17 no.4
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    • pp.31-43
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    • 2022
  • Startups are recognized as the vitality of the economy, and countries are competing to attract competitive overseas entrepreneurs and startups to their own startup ecosystem. In this global trend, entrepreneurs cross the border without hesitation, expecting abundant available resources and a startup friendly environment. Despite the increasing frequency of start-up migration between countries, studies related to this are very rare. Therefore, this study has chosen the cross-border migration of startups between countries as a research topic, and those who have been involved in the cross-border entrepreneurial migration to South Korea as a research sample. This study consists of two stages. The first research stage hires a Delphi method to collect expert opinions and find major factors related to the global startup migration. Drawing on the prior literature on the regional startup ecosystem at the national level, this stage is to conduct expert interviews in order to discover underlying factors and subfactors important for global migration of startups. The second stage measures the importance of the factors and subfactors using the AHP model. The priorities of factors and factors were identified hiring the overseas entrepreneurs who moved to Korea as the AHP survey samples. The results of this study suggest some interesting implications. First, a group of entrepreneurs with nomadic tendencies was found in the trend of global migration of entrepreneurs. They had already started their own businesses with the same business ideas in multiple countries before settling down in Korea. Second, important unique factors and subfactors in the context of global start-up migration were identified. A good example is the government's support package, including start-up visas. Third, it was possible to know the priority of the factors and subfactors that influence the global migration of startups This study is meaningful in that it preemptively conducted exploratory research focusing on a relatively new phenomenon of global startup migration, which recently catches attention in the global startup ecosystem. At the same time, it has a limitation in that it is difficult to generalize the meanings found in this study because the research was conducted based on the case of South Korea