CTMS wishes you a happy lunar new year!
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With 2022 in the rearview, and as we venture into 2023, take a moment to reflect on CTMS' most important events and research topics of the past year.
- CTMS Research: Our best-read pieces of 2022 and collected data focused on the COVID-19 pandemic, care, work-life balance, demographic changes, and more.
- CTMS Work: Our work was shared through seminars, workshops, roundtables and conferences.
Read on for our full work, and don’t miss CTMS' News for a recap journey of some of the year’s biggest inflection points.
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CTMS Report | 2022 International Care Conference
The “care crisis” exacerbated by declining fertility rates and an increasing aging population has emerged as a serious problem within the global society. Join world-renown scholars, experts, and policymakers on the discussion of policy issues related to the care crisis in this 2022 International Care Conference report.
▷ Read highlights
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CTMS Knowledge Sharing | Seminar Series
Throughout 2022, CTMS held two seminar series called “- Creating an Inclusive Society” and “Migration and Integration” centered around the issues of inclusivity, migration, labor, youth, and more. Both sessions successfully delivered provoking discussions and presentations with an average of 100 participants per session, accompanied by field experts.
▷Revisit the seminars
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CTMS Youth | International Migration Roundtable
CTMS responded to the academic demand to study the issues of migration and refugees in Korea through its "International Migration RoundTable" which served as a valuable venue for young researchers and graduate students interested in these topics to interact and discuss with colleagues with similar interests and expand their research interests. This 2022 initiative was joined by students from Seoul National University, Korea University, and Ewha Womans University.
▷ Most read blog from our Roundtables
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In the year of the rabbit, CTMS jumps right into 2023
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CTMS Expertise | Seminar Series
CTMS Director Ki-Soo Eun was one of the lecturers to present at the 92nd forum held by the Korea Institute for Shared Growth, where he discussed Korea's declining fertility rates and ineffective population growth policies.
▷ Follow Prof. Eun's solution
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Blog Talks | Living Solo in Korea
Marriage, childbirth and housing...can these main factors change the future of Korea? Young Koreans seem to be choosing the 'solo' life instead of the traditional route of marriage and parenthood? Is this trend just a trend? or should we prepare for a new reality?
▷ Let the youth speak
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