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Hae Yeon Choo

Researcher at University of Toronto

Publications -  12
Citations -  1481

Hae Yeon Choo is an academic researcher from University of Toronto. The author has contributed to research in topics: Citizenship & Intersectionality. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 11 publications receiving 1280 citations. Previous affiliations of Hae Yeon Choo include University of Wisconsin-Madison.

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Practicing Intersectionality in Sociological Research: A Critical Analysis of Inclusions, Interactions, and Institutions in the Study of Inequalities*

TL;DR: The authors distinguish three styles of understanding intersectionality in practice: group-centered, process-centered and system-centered: multiply marginalized groups and their perspectives at the center of the research, highlighting power as relational, seeing the interactions among variables as multiplying oppressions at various points of intersection and drawing attention to unmarked groups.
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Gendered Modernity and Ethnicized Citizenship North Korean Settlers in Contemporary South Korea

TL;DR: This paper explored the gendered construction of South Korean citizenship through the lens of North Korean settlers' experiences in South Korea and found that the overall frame of perception of North Korea settlers is deeply gendered, with modernity as a powerful ethnic marker.
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The Cost of Rights Migrant Women, Feminist Advocacy, and Gendered Morality in South Korea

TL;DR: In this article, the authors focus on the everyday lives of migrant women in two feminized sectors of migration (cross-border marriage and sexual commerce) to situate the act of claiming rights in relation to the gendered pursuit of moral respect, and argue that feminist groups in South Korea relied on the discourse of victimization and trafficking in pressuring the South Korean state to account for the human rights of migrant wives and migrant hostesses.
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The Transnational Journey of Intersectionality

TL;DR: Black Feminist Thought is grounded in the experiences of African American women yet it does not stop there as mentioned in this paper, and I also hoped that my ideas would travel beyond U.S. borders, not as yet another American export to the rest of the world, but rather as part of the beginnings of a dialogue with similarly subordinated groups in a global context as well as all those who wish to build vibrant, multiethnic societies.
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Women's Migration for Domestic Work and Cross‐Border Marriage in East and Southeast Asia: Reproducing Domesticity, Contesting Citizenship

TL;DR: In this paper, an integrative review of the literature on women's migration for domestic work and cross-border marriages in East and Southeast Asia is presented, highlighting structural analyses of the demographic and socio-economic shifts that propel women migration while also attending to the affective dimension of migrant women's desires and duties and brokerages that mediate the migrant flow.