National identity and citizenship in the people's republic of China and the republic of Korea

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Abstract

This paper points out the limitations of culturalist approaches to the PRC and the ROK and deals with factors that contribute to the legal definition of citizenship in those two counties. The understanding of political and economic interests, rather than cultural aspects, is important in explaining the changes of the definition of citizenship there. China institutionalized a state-centered national identity, while Korea constructed an ethnic-centered national identity as they became integrated into the international order as nation-states. However, both the PRC and ROK made important changes in their legal definitions of citizenship regardless of their distinct national identities in China and Korea. Copy; Blackwell Publishing Ltd 9600 Garsington Road.

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APA

Choe, H. (2006). National identity and citizenship in the people’s republic of China and the republic of Korea. Journal of Historical Sociology, 19(1), 84–118. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-6443.2006.00270.x

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