Gender in Transition: The Case of North Korea

M. Noland, Stephan Haggard
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引用次数: 19

Abstract

This paper uses a survey of 300 North Korean refugees to examine the experience of women in North Korea's fitful economic transition. Like other socialist states, North Korea has maintained a de jure commitment to women's rights. However, we find that women have been disproportionately shed from state-affiliated employment and thrust into a market environment characterized by weak institutions and corruption. As a result, the state and its affiliated institutions are increasingly populated by males, and the market, particularly in its retail aspects, is dominated by women. Among the most recent cohort of refugees to leave North Korea, more than one-third of male respondents indicate that criminality and corruption is the best way to make money, and 95 percent of female traders report paying bribes to avoid the penal system. In short, the increasingly male-dominated state preys on the increasingly female-dominated market. These results paint a picture of a vulnerable group that has been disadvantaged in North Korea's transition. Energies are directed toward survival, mass civil disobedience is reactive, and as a group, this population appears to lack the tools or social capital to act collectively to improve their status.
转型中的性别:朝鲜的案例
本文通过对300名朝鲜难民的调查,来考察女性在朝鲜时断时续的经济转型中的经历。与其他社会主义国家一样,朝鲜在法律上一直致力于维护妇女权利。然而,我们发现,妇女已不成比例地脱离了与国家有关的就业岗位,并被推入以制度薄弱和腐败为特征的市场环境。其结果是,国家及其附属机构越来越多地由男性组成,而市场,特别是在零售方面,则由女性主导。在最近一批离开朝鲜的难民中,超过三分之一的男性受访者表示,犯罪和腐败是赚钱的最佳途径,95%的女性商人表示行贿以避免受到惩罚。简而言之,日益由男性主导的国家在日益由女性主导的市场上捕食。这些结果描绘了一个在朝鲜转型过程中处于不利地位的弱势群体。精力被导向生存,大规模的公民不服从是被动的,作为一个群体,这群人似乎缺乏工具或社会资本来集体行动以提高他们的地位。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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