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Selected for the World-Class Humanities Research Institute Development Program
WRITER 댶외홍보센터 WRITE DAY 2025-04-14
COUNT 75
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Selected for the World-Class Humanities Research Institute Development Program
댶외홍보센터 2025-04-14 75

ݺߣ Selected for 'World-Class Humanities Research Institute Development' under Humanities Korea 3.0

- Global China Research Institute to Receive 4.8 Billion Won in Funding Over 6 Years to Become a World-Class Humanities Research Institute


ݺߣ (President Bae Sang-hoon) has been selected for the Humanities Korea 3.0 (HK3.0) program, a support project by the Ministry of Education and the National Research Foundation of Korea, aimed at fostering world-class humanities research institutes.

 

The university's Global China Research Institute (Director Lee Bo-go, Professor of division of global and interdisciplinary studies) has been chosen for the research hub-type category of this program and will receive 800 million KRW annually, for a total of 4.8 billion KRW over 6 years. The institute will focus on the agenda "East Asian Youth Studies: Fluid Societies and the Formation of Youth Humanities" to conduct humanities research projects starting this year.

 

The Humanities Korea (HK) support project is a major national initiative launched in 2007 to strengthen university-affiliated research institutes in the humanities, build research foundations, and create world-class research outcomes.

 

The newly established Humanities Korea 3.0 (HK3.0) program continues the research achievements of the previous Humanities Korea (HK/HK+) support project and will continue to support the development of humanities. A total of 10 institutions have been selected this year, including 8 research hub-type institutions such as ݺߣ and 2 consortium-type institutions.

 

ݺߣ has been consecutively selected for both the previous Humanities Korea Plus (HK+) and the Humanities Korea 3.0 support programs, earning recognition as a key institution for fostering regional humanities.

 

As a result, the Global China Research Institute at ݺߣ plans to establish "Youth Studies" as a new academic field to address issues such as population decline, regional extinction, and the youth crisis faced by Busan and East Asian cities. This initiative aims to overcome these challenges and expand the potential of young people in Busan and East Asia into a force that opens a new era.

 

To achieve this, the research institute plans to establish a long-term transnational and interdisciplinary collaborative research system for East Asian Youth Studies and will create and operate a graduate-level joint program related to East Asian Youth Studies. Additionally, to promote regionally integrated and youth-centered humanities, the institute is pushing for the establishment of the Asia Regional Youth Humanities Lab (also known as A-Re-Youth Humanities Lab).

 

Professor Lee Bo-go, Director of the Global China Research Institute, stated, "We will also focus on building an East Asian youth research archive and sharing infrastructure, aiming to establish Busan as a hub for expanding our international humanities research institute with a true East Asian focus." <Pukyong Today>Selected for the World-Class Humanities Research Institute Development Program

 

ݺߣ Selected for 'World-Class Humanities Research Institute Development' under Humanities Korea 3.0

- Global China Research Institute to Receive 4.8 Billion Won in Funding Over 6 Years to Become a World-Class Humanities Research Institute

 

ݺߣ (President Bae Sang-hoon) has been selected for the Humanities Korea 3.0 (HK3.0) program, a support project by the Ministry of Education and the National Research Foundation of Korea, aimed at fostering world-class humanities research institutes.

 

The university's Global China Research Institute (Director Lee Bo-go, Professor of division of global and interdisciplinary studies) has been chosen for the research hub-type category of this program and will receive 800 million KRW annually, for a total of 4.8 billion KRW over 6 years. The institute will focus on the agenda "East Asian Youth Studies: Fluid Societies and the Formation of Youth Humanities" to conduct humanities research projects starting this year.

 

The Humanities Korea (HK) support project is a major national initiative launched in 2007 to strengthen university-affiliated research institutes in the humanities, build research foundations, and create world-class research outcomes.

 

The newly established Humanities Korea 3.0 (HK3.0) program continues the research achievements of the previous Humanities Korea (HK/HK+) support project and will continue to support the development of humanities. A total of 10 institutions have been selected this year, including 8 research hub-type institutions such as ݺߣ and 2 consortium-type institutions.

 

ݺߣ has been consecutively selected for both the previous Humanities Korea Plus (HK+) and the Humanities Korea 3.0 support programs, earning recognition as a key institution for fostering regional humanities.

 

As a result, the Global China Research Institute at ݺߣ plans to establish "Youth Studies" as a new academic field to address issues such as population decline, regional extinction, and the youth crisis faced by Busan and East Asian cities. This initiative aims to overcome these challenges and expand the potential of young people in Busan and East Asia into a force that opens a new era.

 

To achieve this, the research institute plans to establish a long-term transnational and interdisciplinary collaborative research system for East Asian Youth Studies and will create and operate a graduate-level joint program related to East Asian Youth Studies. Additionally, to promote regionally integrated and youth-centered humanities, the institute is pushing for the establishment of the Asia Regional Youth Humanities Lab (also known as A-Re-Youth Humanities Lab).

 

Professor Lee Bo-go, Director of the Global China Research Institute, stated, "We will also focus on building an East Asian youth research archive and sharing infrastructure, aiming to establish Busan as a hub for expanding our international humanities research institute with a true East Asian focus." <Pukyong Today>