User:Elin0914/sandbox

Contents
1) Based on the future, not the present.

- Birth control theory and birth promotion theory

-The irony of Korea and its parent country

- Real Estate Policy in Korea

2) The age of low birth rate, and everything is oversupplied

- a shrinking child population

-How education should change

-Who fills the army?

3) Low birth rate + aging and fighting for jobs like war

- Is low birth rate a job opportunity?

-The aging of the labor market

-The alternative is the system.

4) Low birth rate, aging population, low growth, and alternatives overseas?

-Which population is favorable for development?

-Will it be okay if the production population comes to Korea?

-We should actively engage in overseas investment.

5) Let's prepare for a small and stable Korea.

-To make women have more children

- population measures, should be investment, not welfare

-Let's create a constitution that fits the society.

Review

 * Over the past decade, a budget of 100 trillion won has been spent to boost the birthrate. The number of policies is also 200. But the effect is minimal. Why? Marriage generations delay marriage and young couples are afraid to have children. Why? Isn't population policy stuck within its own framework of "births" and doesn't fully understand why they are reluctant to give birth? Professor Cho Young-tae shows both the past and the future, and the Korean trend and the global trend. It also introduces easily the demographic perspective that has emerged as a new paradigm for the unresolved low birthrate problem. -Lee Seung-wook (honorary professor at Seoul National University, former president of the Korean Association of Population Studies)


 * In the Republic of Korea, which has created miraculous growth over the last 70 years, with no natural resources, we didn't realize that the Korean people themselves were the source of the miracle. Now that we're obsessed with the fear that the source will dry up, the author shows the uncomfortable truth that our future is fairly set. If you want to prepare for a better future, I recommend you read it first. -Song Gil-young (Nextsoft Vice President, author of 'Don't Imagine')



Evaluation
1) 비판

2) 사회적 영향

3) 논란

Whistleblower case in Korea
Korea, too, does not have enough protection for whistleblowers.

In December 2017, a senior UNICEF official was found to have engaged in habitual sexual harassment, but an internal accuser who was "not guilty" by the UNICEF Korea Committee and rather took issue with it was fired. The controversy made headlines after a senior official, identified only by his family name S, repeatedly reported to female employees that he had made "sexual insults or derogatory remarks."

The panel, however, concluded that sexual harassment is not true, citing the difficulty of finding anything unusual in the victim's response immediately after the incident took place.

Officials inside UNICEF claim the ruling was due to the assailant S's own selection of committee members. In fact, S sent an e-mail to UNICEF chairman on Dec. 16, recommending two members of the investigation committee from within, all of whom were appointed.

But in July 2018, the new secretary-general, Lee Ki-chul, apologized again for sexual harassment, not only accepted fines for the insufficient punishment, but also set up a system to reinstate victims and prevent the same problems from occurring.

== Yoon Seock Yang == He is a whistleblower in Korea.

He exposed the army guard's surveillance of civilians. But he was sentenced to two years in prison for desertion from military service.

He joined the army on May 1, 1990, as an active-duty soldier in South Korea. While serving as a platoon member in Cheorwon, Gangwon Province, he is called to the head of the regiment's personnel department. He was ordered by the security forces to reveal all members of the working class struggle. He was then moved to Seoul and continued to be questioned. He worked in front of the university and was trusted. And He got to work for the Security Command.

At the time, he escaped by putting cards and computer diskettes monitoring the president and some 1,300 civilians in his bag.

Yoon Seok-yang, who escaped, went to the Christian Council of Korea, summed up her experience in the Armed Forces Command and wrote the Declaration of Conscience. And, Later in the evening, he talked about the materials he brought to Yang Jung-chul, a senior college student who worked as a reporter.

After the revelation, Yoon Seok-yang, who was protected by the Christian Council of Korea, was arrested in September 1992 by the Armed Forces Command and the military police after being wanted for more than two years.

A movie was modeled on him.