Social Policy Support For Families in the UK and South Korea: To What Extent Does Family Support Create Inclusive Growth and Social Cohesion?

Lead Research Organisation: University of Derby
Department Name: College of Business, Law & Social Sci

Abstract

Family friendly social policy has a strong link to the achievement of key social goals, such as those in the UN Sustainable Development Goals, including inclusive growth and social cohesion. However, even in high income countries, policies supporting families are often inadequate. The Covid-19 pandemic graphically exposed these weaknesses in social policy for families in both the UK and South Korea.

At the same time, the pandemic also highlighted how both social cohesion and economic growth depend on families and households. In the UK, this included the dependence on families to provide both care and home schooling in 'lockdown', the way in which restrictions on childcare and school provision hindered labour market participation, increasing the negative economic effects of the crisis. Similarly, in South Korea, the pandemic has interrupted social relations and networks increasing the risk of unemployment for women who took on the majority of the caring burden.

The research will explore how social policy supports (or not) families in both countries and will highlight how research, policy and practice can learn from experience in each country. Ultimately the aim of the research will be to identify how policy and practice can better support families and households in each country, with this being a stepping-stone to more inclusive growth and social cohesion. While 'family friendly' social policy is often regarded as relating to childcare, parental leave, flexible employment practices and welfare supports, we broaden this to include other forms of emerging family issues such as a lack of social care, children's wellbeing, family support for crime diversion/desistance. We also include the delivery of family policy via non-standard organisations such as in arts or sports participation and the automation of care using robots and artificial intelligence. To achieve its longer-term aims, the project will facilitate the establishment and development of a collaborative network of researchers, policy makers and practitioners interested in how social policy supports families/households in both countries.

The network will develop from existing collaborations between the Principal and Co-Investigators through four specific foci: (a) social care (b) children's wellbeing, (c) desistance from crime, (d) family support through technical innovations and artistic and cultural participations. Four Research Workshops (online) and two subsequent Symposia (face-to-face) will take place in the UK and South Korea in order to develop deeper professional collaborative relationships. Those travelling for the in-person Symposia will have participated in an online Workshop and will be selected to have most capacity for cross-country collaboration to further the development of the network.

The collaboration will result in the publication of two collaborative outputs in the form of a Special Issue of an academic journal and an edited volume. We will also produce a series of ten policy briefings containing key findings from different researchers in the collaboration (i.e. focussing on the UK and South Korea). Some of the outputs will be co-authored by UK/South Korean researchers together. It will also produce two funding proposals to sustain the network and collaborative research between participants. Finally, the partnership will be supported through an infrastructure (e.g. website, art exchange/art exhibition, infographics or photo sharing) which will be institutionalised through approaching international scholarly associations to establish a UK-South Korea Working Group for research on social policy and families (such as The East Asian Social Policy Network or the Korean Institute for Childcare and Education). This will be useful in broadening and sustaining collaboration beyond the direct activities of the partners and participants in this project.

Publications

10 25 50
 
Description MOU (Derby Uni, Chung-Ang and Seoul Theological Uni) 
Organisation Chung-Ang University
Country Korea, Republic of 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution We have made a successful MOU (Memorandum of Understanding) between the University of Derby, Chung-Ang University, and Seoul Theological University. The PI (Dr Sung-Hee Lee) and the Co-Investigators, Prof. Sun-Hee Baek and Dr Bak-Ne Im took the project agenda further to each of their Universities and have been able to implement the MOU in order to maintain future research networking and collaboration even after the end of the project period. The Korea Academy of Family and Social Work was also involved in our project. The President of the Academy (Prof Sun-Hee Baek, Co-I) and the members participated in both of our events (http://www.welfareissue.com/news/articleView.html?idxno=11107).
Collaborator Contribution Chung-Ang University and Seoul Theological University have been immensely helpful in terms of co-hosting four online workshops (21 April, 19 May, 16 June, and 21 July 2022) as well as an international conference (28-29 October 2022) in Seoul, South Korea. In particular, Chung-Ang University made a huge contribution to those events, including: - Offering a conference venue with modern facilities - Organising the conference proceedings by collecting all papers and presentation slides from the presenters (17 papers and 9 posters including PGRs from the UK and South Korea) - Presenting papers and moderating sessions for the conference - Assisting simultaneous interpretations during the conference (eg., providing microphones and amplifiers and so on) - Accommodating meals (lunch and dinners for two days of the conference) and refreshments during the conference - Providing student volunteers who helped us have a very smoothly run and successful event. - Providing hand sanitisers and Covid-19 test kits for the participants Seoul Theological University also has been incredibly helpful, especially in promoting both of our events (Online workshops & In-person conferences) in South Korea through the university website as well as local news media (https://www.veritas-a.com/news/articleView.html?idxno=412064) (http://m.cherald.co.kr/news/articleView.html?idxno=21990). Professor Sun-Hee Baek (Co-I) helped the PI arrange the high-profile presenters, discussants, and moderators from South Korea, such as the CEO of Mirae Foundation, President of Korea Human Resources Development Institute for Health & Welfare, and former President of National Youth Policy Institute.
Impact As a Research Networking Project, this collaboration is based on the following four key themes; (a) Women and Care, (b) Children's well-being, (c) Crime diversion/desistance, and (d) Technical innovations (e.g., virtual reality, music therapy, A.I, etc). With these multi-disciplinary themes, we have organised 1) four online workshops as well as 2) an in-person conference at Chung-Ang University in Seoul, South Korea. More details are following;
Start Year 2022
 
Description A series of four online workshops 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Other audiences
Results and Impact In order to develop deeper professional collaborative relationships and public engagement, we have run a series of four online workshops, focused on 'Social Care', 'Children's Wellbeing', 'Crime Desistance' and 'Wellbeing, Art and Technology'. In each event, we had six presentations exploring key issues and recent policy development if there were any. For the language barrier, simultaneous interpretations were available for the whole session including Q & A. We had a relatively high number in the audience: for example, for the first workshop (Social Care), we had more than 60 people as the audience. The time difference between the UK and South Korea was well compromised, so it ran 07:30 - 11:00 am in the UK whereas it was 15:30 - 17:00.

More details of the programmes are followed;
Online Workshop One - Social Care in the UK and South Korea, Thursday 21 April 2022
- Presentation 1: Care and Caring in the UK under austerity and COVID-19 (Professor Shirin Rai and Professor Juanita Elias, University of Warwick, UK)
- Presentation 2. How to End the Care Crisis? Moving Beyond Short-term Care Fixes (Dr Emma Dowling, University of Vienna, Austria)
- Presentation 3. Is the English childcare market becoming as unsustainable as the English adult social care market? (Professor Eva Lloyd, University of East London, UK)
- Presentation 4. Care Democracy and Care Governance (Professor Soo Jung Jang, Dankook University, South Korea)
- Presentation 5. Carework and the Care Workforce (Jin-Kyoung Park, Secretary General of Presidential Committee on Ageing Society and Population Policy, South Korea)
- Presentation 6. About Korea Central Public Agency for Social Services (Professor Sun Huh, President of Korea Human Resources Development Institute for Health and Welfare, South Korea)

Online Workshop Two - Children's Wellbeing in the UK and South Korea, Thursday 19 May 2022
- Presentation 1. Inequalities in children's wellbeing (Professor Paul Bywaters, University of Huddersfield and Child Welfare Project, UK)
- Presentation 2. Looked after children and wellbeing during the Covid-19 pandemic (Claire Parker, Derbyshire County Council Virtual School, UK)
- Presentation 3. Families on universal credit during Covid-19 (Robyn Fawcett, University of Derby, UK)
- Presentation 4. Inclusive child policy and child protection in South Korea (Professor Sun-Hee Baek, Seoul Theological University, South Korea)
- Presentation 5. Children's life during covid-19 pandemic (Yoo-Jung Han, Good Neighbours, South Korea)
- Presentation 6. Children with low-income families during Covid-19 (Dr Bak-Ne Im, Chung-Ang University, South Korea)

Online Workshop Three - Children's Wellbeing in the UK and South Korea, Thursday 16 June 2022
- Presentation 1. Females and desistance in the UK (Dr Gilly Sharpe, University of Sheffield, UK)
- Presentation 2. Desistance in Canada (Professor Isabelle F-Dufour, Laval University, Canada)
- Presentation 3. What do we know about how the CJS can help people desist? International evidence (Professor Stephen Farrall, University of Derby, UK)
- Presentation 4. Research data on juvenile offenders' desistance (Professor Young-Sun Han, Kyonggi University, South Korea)
- Presentation 5. Desistance from and persistence in male offending; the case of South Korea (Professor Tent Bax, Ewha Womans University, South Korea)
- Presentation 6. Community supervision on sex offenders in South Korea: punitive approach (Dr Jisun Choi, Korean Institute of Criminology and Justice, South Korea)

Online Workshop Four - Family Support Through Technical Innovation and Artistic and Cultural Participation in the UK and South Korea, Thursday 21 July 2022
- Presentation 1. Future housing welfare model for super-aged society (Jin-Ok Yang, CEO of Good Neighbours Mirae Foundation, South Korea)
- Presentation 2. Development of a visuo-haptic VR based interactive music activity programme for the elderly (Dr Jung A Oh, Chungcheongnam-do Public Agency for Social Service and Professor Jaeeon Yoo, Gachon University, South Korea)
- Presentation 3. Introduction of Korean music therapy programme trends and the convergence research (Dr Eunyoung Han, Haeundae Paik Hospital, South Korea)
- Presentation 4. Arts programmes for young people in care (Dawn Williams, Blue Cabin, UK)
- Presentation 5. Exploring the health-related impact of culturally competent artificial intelligence embedded into socially assistive robots and tested in older adult care homes, Dr Chris Papadopoulos, University of Bedfordshire, UK)
- Presentation 6. UK and South Korean Comparative Study on Group Singing for People with Parkinson's (Dr Yoon Irons, University of Derby, UK)
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022
URL https://www.ukskfamilypolicy.org/webinars
 
Description Interview for newspaper 
Form Of Engagement Activity A magazine, newsletter or online publication
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Media (as a channel to the public)
Results and Impact Followed by my recognition from the networking group, I was interviewed by a national newspaper in South Korea, called 'eToday'. eToday is an economic newspaper, which is a comprehensive economic media covering all filed, including politics, economy, society, and culture. I was asked particularly about the policy implementation of 'Grandparents' childcare credit' in the UK and the whole article only highlighted the interview talk I had with them. I believe this feature of my view related to the UK policy on the national media in South Korea has raised the impact of our research networking project.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022
URL https://bravo.etoday.co.kr/view/atc_view/14156
 
Description Organising an international conference (in-person) in Seoul, South Korea 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Other audiences
Results and Impact In order to develop deeper professional collaborative relationships, we organised an international conference in Seoul, South Korea. Throughout the online workshops we organised, we had more than 200 people registered for the online events, and we wanted to follow up the networking group by sending out the invitation to present their studies/papers at the conference and/or to attend the conference for future research publication talks.

We were able to organise an international conference at Chung-Ang University in Seoul. Below includes more details about the programme.
Day 1: Friday 28 October 2022
09:00-10:00 Registration
10:00-10:20 Opening Ceremonies
Welcome
Dr. Sung-Hee Lee (Principal Investigator, University of Derby, UK)
Prof. Kyo-Seong Kim (Dean of Planning and Budget Office & Director of BK21 Four, Chung-Ang University, South Korea)
Prof. Sun-Hee Baek (President of Korean Academy of Family and Social Work, South Korea)

10:20-12:40 Work & Social Care
CHAIR Prof. Sun-Hee Baek (Seoul Theological University, and former President of Korea Institute of Child Care and Education, South Korea)
Speaker & Topic
South Korea
Dr. Kyoung-Hee Ma (Korean Women's Development Institute)
'The current issues of social care policy and the tasks in South Korea'
Prof. Sophia Seung-yoon Lee (Chung-Ang University)
'Inactive by choice? Covid-19 and Korean female labor market'
Dr. Sanghee Park (National Health Insurance Service)
'Long-term care insurance for the elderly and family care'
UK
Prof. Alex Nunn & Dr Sung-Hee Lee (University of Derby)
'Social policy support for working families: To what extent policies and institutions support families to balance work and family responsibilities in the UK and South Korea?'
Dr. Daniela Tepe-Belfrage (University of Liverpool)
'Comparing COVID social policy responses in Germany and the UK: the path dependencies enshrining gender roles and poverty'
Discussant Prof. Soo Jung Jang (Dankook University)

12:40-14:00 Lunch1

14:00-16:00 Wellbeing, Art & Technology
CHAIR Jin-Ok Yang (Executive Director of Good Neighbors' Mirae Foundation, South Korea)
Speaker & Topic
UK
Dr. Natalia Gerodetti (Leeds Beckett University)
'Family and community food practices: food production and consumption in relation to social inclusion and well-being'
Dr. Yoon Irons (University of Derby)
'Benefits of group singing for UK older adults' health and wellbeing before and during the pandemic'
South Korea
Prof. Soowan Kim (Kangnam University)
'Local government-led care services for older adults using technology in community: current trends, issues, and implications'
Dr. Eunyoung Han (Haeundae Paik Hospital)
'Experience of global singing project for Korean Parkinson's disease patients and caregivers in multicultural music therapy'
Discussant Prof. Sooah Nam (Gachon University, South Korea)
Prof. Alex Nunn (University of Derby, UK)

18:00-20:00 Korean Dinner (Hanjeongsik)2

Day 2: Saturday 29 October 2022
09:00-10:00 Registration
10:00-12:00 Children's Wellbeing
CHAIR Prof. Sun Hur (Soonchunhyang University, and former President of Korea Human Resource Development Institute for Health & Welfare, South Korea)
Speaker & Topic Global Perspectives
Prof. John Hudson (University of York, UK)
'Children's wellbeing and the policy change in the UK'
Dr. Dominic Richardson (UNICEF, Italy)
'Child well-being in a post-COVID world: What has the pandemic taught us about policies for children in high-income countries?'
South Korea
Dr. Hyemee Yoon (National Center for the Rights of the Child)
'Strengthening governmental accountability in Korean child welfare'
Dr. Jeong-Hee Ryu (Korea Institute for Health and Social Affairs)
'Multidimensional Child Poverty in South Korea'
Discussant Prof. Young Choi (Chung-Ang University, South Korea)

12:00-14:00 Lunch3 & Publication Talk

14:00-16:00 Desistance From Crime
CHAIR Prof. Byung-guk Song (Soonchunhyang University, and former President of National Youth Policy Institute, South Korea)
South Korea
Prof. Trent Bax (Ewha Womans University)
'Desistance from and persistence in male offending: The case of South Korea'
Dr. Jeongwon Choi (National Youth Policy Institute)
'Recidivism of Juvenile Offenders: What is at stake and what to do?'

Global Perspectives
Prof. Steve Farrall (University of Nottingham, UK)
'What do we know about the CJS can help people desist? International evidence'
Dr. Dana Segev (Independent Researcher, Israel)
'The role of societies in shaping the trajectories of desistance'
Discussant Dr. Yoori Seong (Korean Institute of Criminology and Justice, South Korea)

16:00-16:15 Closing
Dr. Sung-Hee Lee (Principal Investigator, University of Derby)

Day 1 & 2: Friday-Saturday 28-29 October
Postgraduate Poster Presentations
Presenter & Topic
UK & Europe
Robyn Fawcett (University of Derby, UK)
'The impact of universal credit on families' wellbeing'
Jinri Kim (Science Po, France)
'Intimate stranger: A study of Filipino domestic workers in France'

South Korea
Suchul Kim (Ministry of Justice, South Korea)
'Probation supervision using new technologies for reducing reoffending of the offenders - electronic monitoring in South Korea'
Jin-Lu Bao (Chung-Ang University)
'Effects of acculturation stress of marriage immigrant women on depression of their multicultural adolescent children: The mediating effect of parental efficacy'
Na-ri Park (Chung-Ang University)
'Changes in Labor Policy and Decomposition of Wage Inequality during the Moon Jae-in Administration'
Ji-Eun Lee (Chung-Ang University)
'Possibilities and Limitations of Basic Income from an Ecological Perspective in Korea'
Eun-Jung Hwang (Chung-Ang University)
'Level and Causes of Economic Heterogeneity in Female-headed Households in Korea'
Hye-Jin Kim (Chung-Ang University)
'A Comparative Study on the Out-of-School Care Policy Based on the User's Rights Protection Level - A Fuzzy-Set Ideal Type Analysis-
Young-Chae Park (Chung-Ang University)
'The Effects of Youth's Labor Market Status on Depression: Focusing on the Moderating Effect of Parental Socioeconomic Status'
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022
URL https://www.ukskfamilypolicy.org/south-korea-conference-2022
 
Description UK-South Korea Family Policy Research Networking Group 
Form Of Engagement Activity Engagement focused website, blog or social media channel
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Other audiences
Results and Impact We have been able to establish the 'UK-South Korea Family Policy Research Networking Group', with four sub-themes; 'Social Care', 'Children's Wellbeing', 'Crime Desistance', and 'Wellbeing, Art and Technology". Along with academics/researchers focusing on social policy toward families in both countries, we have been able to build a sustainable research network between the University of Derby and researchers at the Universities of Warwick, Liverpool, and Queen's Belfast in the UK. Moreover, we also have made a network with Good Neighbours, Good Neighbours Mirae Foundation, Korea Human Resource Development Institute for Health & Welfare, and the Korean Institute of Criminology and Justice, in South Korea. We also have been able to extend our network further by reaching out to academics/researchers in Europe (eg., University of Vienna in Austria, and UNICEF in Italy) and policymakers (eg., Presidential Committee on Aging Society and Population Policy in South Korea), professional practitioners (e.g, clinical researchers, art therapist, virtual school teacher), and PGRs in the UK and South Korea.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022
URL https://www.ukskfamilypolicy.org/home