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What determines the relative success of different war compensation policies? Comparing three unresolved compensation issues between Japan and South Korea도심 녹지공원이 지표흐름에 미치는 영향

Other Titles
도심 녹지공원이 지표흐름에 미치는 영향
Authors
Lee, Jun YoungKim, Yeon JooKim, Ji Young
Issue Date
Dec-2022
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Keywords
International Red Cross; Japan-South Korea relations; NGOs; postwar compensation
Citation
Japanese Journal of Political Science, v.23, no.4, pp 313 - 332
Pages
20
Indexed
SSCI
SCOPUS
Journal Title
Japanese Journal of Political Science
Volume
23
Number
4
Start Page
313
End Page
332
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/erica/handle/2021.sw.erica/111399
DOI
10.1017/S1468109922000214
ISSN
1468-1099
1474-0060
Abstract
This article examines three Japan-South Korea postwar compensation cases: the comfort women issue, the Sakhalin Island forced labor issue, and Korean atomic bomb survivor issue. These compensation movements produced vastly different results, even though the basic policy directions for compensation provision in all three cases were similar. Japan's approach toward the comfort women problem has been a complete failure, while its treatment of the Sakhalin forced labor issue and the atomic bomb issues has been more successful. This article's explanation of the different outcomes focuses on the character and geographical base of the civic groups leading these compensation movements. In South Korea, women's rights activists spearheaded the comfort women compensation movement and related victim-relief activities. The Korean non-governmental organizations (NGOs) that assisted the comfort women treated this problem not only as a women's rights issue, but also as a nationalist issue. In contrast, the Red Cross, a politically neutral international organization, promoted the Sakhalin forced labor and atomic bomb issues. In short, the different receptions accorded to those championing the comfort women issue and those promoting the Sakhalin forced labor and atomic bomb issues depended on the principal agent of each compensation process. This article aims to provide some implications for successfully implementing postwar compensation policies. It suggests that, if successful postwar compensation policy depends on successful perpetrator-victim reconciliation, establishing solidarity between perpetrator and victim countries' civic groups is important. This can only be facilitated through the depoliticized and transparent operation of leading NGOs both inside and outside the redressal-seeking nation.
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