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On March 20th, home care workers in New York went on a hunger strike to demand an end to the dreaded 24-hour workday. States in the Global North seek to alleviate their aging populations by bringing in workers from the Global South, where imperialism and neoliberal policies have forced these workers to immigrate to global metropoles such as New York City, only to end up trapped in sweatshop labor. Jun and Yolanda from Youth Against Sweatshops and the Ain't I a Woman campaign share with us stories of home care workers struggle, as well as connecting the fight against the 24-hour day with gentrification and Palestine.
You can support home care workers by donating to: https://nomore24.org/
Follow the Ain't I a Woman campaign here:
Website: https://www.aintiawoman.org/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/aiwcampaign/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/aiwcampaign
Follow Youth Against Sweatshops here:
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/youthagainstsweatshops/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/youthasnyc
Red Star Over Asia interviews Sun Cheol, who explains how the South Korean climate justice movement emerged out of tensions with the broader environmental movement's reluctance to confront "green capital," building ties with trade unions and social movements, the historical role global solidarity played, as well as resisting co-option by the state.
Sun Chul is a climate activist and organizer
Public Policy Institute for the People/사회공공연구원
http://m.ppip.or.kr/
Energy Labor Social Network/에너지노동사회네트워크
https://www.enosa.kr/
We are back after a long hiatus, with a brilliant guest to discuss China, a topic many of our listeners have long asked us to cover.
Our guest is Yueran Zhang is a PhD student in sociology at UC-Berkeley studying workers democracy movements in China, particularly in the 1970s-1980s.
This episode was initially intended to be focused on the specific era of workers' self-organization in the late 1970s-1980s, but our guest also gave a brilliant schematic overview of the Chinese Revolution, the Mao era, the Deng led 'reform' period and how workers organized throughtout, all the way up to the present. This episode therefore serves as a great introduction to PRC politics generally.
You can find his work and contact info here: https://sociology.berkeley.edu/graduate-student/yueran-zhang
https://jacobin.com/author/yueran-zhang
Both Koreas have a historically frought relationship with Japan, due to the history of colinization. Beginning in the late 19th century, there were waves of Korean immigration to Japan. This accelerated dramatically with Japan's formal annexation of the Korean pennisula in the early 20th century.
In Japan today, the descendants of these Koreas are known as Zainichi.
We are joined on this episode by our friend Haruki Eda, a third generation Zainichi. We talked about the complex and fascinating history of Koreans in Japan, the politics of the community, how this diaspora relates to both North and South Korea, and so much more.
Haruki Eda is an interdisplinary social scientist specializing in ethnicity and nationalism, international political economy, gender/sexuality, and cultural ecology. He recently completed his PhD in Sociology at Rutgers University and is preparing to publish his first book, Queer Unification: Community and Healing in the Korean Diaspora.
He is also an activist with the U.S. based Korean organization Nodutdol, comprised of diasproic Koreans and organizing for a world free of imperialism, and for Korea’s re/unification and national liberation.
You can follow him on Twitter @zainichipoetics and check out his website here: https://www.harukieda.com/
And follow Notdutdol on twitter @https://nodutdol.org/ and their website: https://nodutdol.org/
The South Korean intelligence services and police raided the headquarters of a major umbrella labor union in central Seoul in late January 2023, on dubious suspicion that some members had violated national security laws. This is the audio version of a recent video livestream correct the record and discuss how this is an attack on South Korea's young democracy that risks dragging us back to the dark times of military dictatorship.
This is audio from a live stream on the South Korea truckers strike.
Yeonwoo Choi, a student activist and organizer in Seoul
Sanggu Gang, a member of KCTU's young wing in Busan
Bori, a co-host of Red Star Over Asia, but also currently a staff organizer for KCTU in Seoul, so he will also be sharing his analysis.
This is the raw audio/podcast version of a YouTube livestream recorded the evening of 3/8/22 (election night), before the results were announced. We are posting this the morning of 3/9/22 and we now know that Yoon Suk-yeol, the main conservative candidate, is South Korea's President-elect and will take office in May.
Vladimir Tikhonov, also known by his pen name Pak Noja/박노자, is a Russian-born scholar of Korean Studies and a Professor at the University of Oslo in Norway.
This is part two of a two-part episode.
The podcast currently has 24 episodes available.