AREA Ruhr Book Talk Series

AREA Ruhr

In this podcast series, experts from the Alliance for Research on East Asia (AREA) Ruhr meet up with authors of newly released academic books that deal with East Asia from a wide variety of disciplinary perspectives. The format aims to provide insights into recently published research results and a discussion of the “research journey” that authors have been engaged in. The talks are conducted in English and German.

Episodes

  1. DEC 11

    #6 Youngah Guahk: »Sustainable Development and Local Government in South Korea: The Politics of Eco-City Transition« (English)

    Youngah Guahk’s book explores the crucial issue of sustainable transition in modern industrial societies by focusing on local dynamics in South Korea. As urbanization continues, eco-city development has become especially important in East Asia, and Guahk’s work highlights key aspects of urban sustainability. The book examines specific cases of Korean local governments pursuing sustainable urban development, assessing their progress through a variety of sources and research methods. It provides detailed studies of Suwon—where debates over economic development costs led to policy changes and only partial sustainability success—and Jeju province, where efforts to protect natural heritage and tourism drove a long-term push for international recognition. By comparing the objectives, strategies, and decision-making in these two cases, the book clarifies the roles of local leaders, central government, civil society, and international organizations. Guahk’s analysis deepens our understanding of the challenges and drivers of local sustainable transition in South Korea and beyond. Dr. Youngah Guahk is a lecturer at Luiss University in Rome, Italy, and works on Korean affairs. A native speaker of Korean, she is a trained political scientist who received the title of Dr. rer. pol. (PhD) from the University of Duisburg-Essen in Germany. Dr. Guahk is interested in and has published on political institutions in Korea, such as the Korean National Assembly, the role of local government, and on public and cultural diplomacy. This episode is hosted by AREA Ruhr member Prof. Dr. Axel Klein (University of Duisburg-Essen, Institute of East Asian Studies). The talk took place on 25 November 2025.

    39 min
  2. JUN 24

    #4 Shuxuan Zhou: »From Forest Farm to Sawmill. Stories of Labor, Gender, and the Chinese State« (English)

    In socialist China, the state forestry and timber sectors employed men as official state workers, while women participated as family dependents and collective laborers. Starting in the 1950s, these groups transformed rural landscapes into urban-industrial zones. This makes forestry an exceptional case for examining how government policies shaped and reinforced interconnected dualisms—such as those between humans and nature, urban and rural areas, production and reproduction, and male and female labor. Drawing on oral histories from Fujian, this publication places personal stories of work and resistance in forestry and wood processing within the broader framework of postrevolutionary socialist reforms and China’s rapid economic growth after the 1990s. By exploring how sawmill and forest farm workers adapted state projects and contested authority, this book fosters dialogue across gender studies, labor studies, and environmental studies. Dr. Shuxuan Zhou is a policy analyst in the Seattle Office of Labor Standards and an affiliated faculty member with the University of Washington Department of Gender, Women, and Sexuality Studies. She is also a nonfiction writer, aiming to bridge the Chinese- and English-speaking worlds. In this episode, she discusses her 2024 publication with AREA Ruhr host Dr. Nicolas Schillinger (University of Duisburg-Essen, Institute of East Asian Studies). This talk was recorded on 6 May 2025.

    44 min

About

In this podcast series, experts from the Alliance for Research on East Asia (AREA) Ruhr meet up with authors of newly released academic books that deal with East Asia from a wide variety of disciplinary perspectives. The format aims to provide insights into recently published research results and a discussion of the “research journey” that authors have been engaged in. The talks are conducted in English and German.