• Title/Summary/Keyword: Uzbek students in Korea

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A Study on Clothing Purchasing Behavior of the Uzbekistan Students Staying in Korea(II): Focus on the Fashion Lifestyle (우즈베키스탄 유학생들의 의복 구매행동에 관한 연구(II) -패션 라이프스타일을 중심으로-)

  • Lee, Okhee
    • Journal of Fashion Business
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    • v.23 no.5
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    • pp.67-80
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    • 2019
  • This study analyzed the factors determining fashion lifestyle of Uzbek students in Korea and their clothing purchasing behavior and attitudes towards Hallyu, the Korean image, satisfaction, preferences and purchasing intentions for Korean fashion according to fashion lifestyle. The data collected from 260 Uzbekistan students in Korea were subjected to factor analysis, cluster analysis, ANOVA, Duncan test, and ${\chi}^2$-test using SPSS 25.0. The results were as follows: 1) Fashion lifestyle was analyzed based on brand orientation, tradition, fashion, and personality. The fashion lifestyle group was classified as follows: brand, fashion/personality, traditional, and fashion passive. 2) The evaluation criteria for fashion products, information sources, and store selection criteria were varied among the four groups of fashion lifestyle. 3) The attitude toward Hallyu and Korean image, the satisfaction, preference, and purchasing intention of KFP varied significantly between the fashion lifestyle groups. 4) The demographics of fashion lifestyle groups showed significant differences in sex and residential status. These results can be used as a basis for fashion companies targeting markets for Uzbek people in their 20s.

Craving Jobs? Revisiting Labor and Educational Migration from Uzbekistan to Japan and South Korea

  • DADABAEV, TIMUR;SOIPOV, JASUR
    • Acta Via Serica
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    • v.5 no.2
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    • pp.111-140
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    • 2020
  • This paper focuses on the emerging patterns of educational mobility and unskilled labor migration from Uzbekistan to Japan and South Korea. Labor migration and educational mobility are becoming the next "horizon" in the expanded relationship between East and Central Asia, powered by several factors, including the efforts by Japan and South Korea to build "original" people-oriented policy engagements with the region and the demand from Central Asian states, such as Uzbekistan, to provide more labor opportunities to their young and growing populations. This paper presents the initial findings of a pilot survey that explores and occasionally compares the experiences of Uzbek migrants to Japan and South Korea, using datasets of face-to-face interviews related to various aspects of life in Japan and South Korea. The interviews were conducted face to face and online (Telegram, Skype, etc.) with 66 migrants and Japanese language school students (whom this paper treats as labor migrants masquerading as students) in Japan from November 2019 to January 2020 as well as online with 30 laborers and students in South Korea from August to September 2020.

Korean Medical Care and Education Activity in Uzbekistan - Focusing on the Korea-Uzbekistan Friendship Hospital of Korean Medicine - (우즈베키스탄의 한의 진료 및 한의학 교육 현황 - 한국 우즈베키스탄 친선 한방병원을 중심으로 -)

  • Oh, Seungyun;Kwon, Donghyun;Lee, Joonsuk;Dilfuza, Buranova;Jang, Eunsu;Joo, Jongcheon
    • The Journal of Korean Medicine
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    • v.35 no.3
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    • pp.15-21
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    • 2014
  • The Korea-Uzbekistan Friendship Hospital of Korean Medicine has been providing care and education of Korean medicine in Uzbekistan since 1997, while overseas expansion of Korean medicine is expanding each year. The status of these activities is investigated to suggest methods of development of Korean medicine in Uzbekistan. The hospital treats about 15000 people in Uzbekistan for free every year. Among patients visiting the hospital, the distribution of female, age 50s to 70s is most common, Uzbek, Russian, and Korean are common ethnicities, musculoskeletal disease, neurologic disease and gastrointestinal disease are common ailments. In addition, the hospital has educated students of Tashkent Medical Academy and doctors belonging to the Department of Acupuncturists of Korean Oriental Medicine of the Uzbekistan Medical Association. Korean medical care, education and research in the field of systematic support on a long-term roadmap should be continued for developing Korean medicine on Uzbekistan.