Winner of the 3rd China-Japan Youth Idea Paper Competition / Chinese Political Science students

  • 24.09.25 / 이정민

 

A research team of undergraduate students from Kookmin University's Department of Chinese Studies, majoring in Chinese Political Science, won the first prize at the third China-Korea Youth Idea Paper Contest held on Tuesday, September 3, at the Indochina Forum. 

 

 

 

 

 

The Indochina Forum is held annually in Incheon, and this year, more than 20 teams participated in the competition under the theme of “New China-Korea Cooperation for Progress”. In 2024, the event was co-hosted by Incheon Metropolitan City and the Embassy of the People's Republic of China in Korea, and eight organizations including the Incheon Institute, Incheon Chamber of Commerce, and the Modern China Society.

 

 

The winning team, Jae.Tan.Seng (Minhyung Kim, Jungmin Lee, Hyunghoon Park, and Kyujin Hwang), presented a paper titled “Reflections on China-ROK Carbon Cooperation: Focusing on the Joint Carbon Credit Market Program ‘TANAN’ between Chinese and Korean Universities,” which proposed a plan for environmental cooperation between the youth of China and Korea. The main contents include joint carbon measurement method, allocation method, joint declaration, and establishment of autonomous organizations in universities.

 

 

Kookmin University is the lead university of the five universities participating in the Humanities and Social Sciences (HUSS) Environment Consortium and actively supports student activities related to the environment. Kookmin University's Climate Change Response Project has established and operates convergence and interdisciplinary majors that link various majors and climate to foster humanities and social talents with convergent thinking under the theme of 'coexistence and co-prosperity in the era of climate crisis'. The 'Chinese Climate and Environment Major' is a representative example, which is a convergence of the Chinese Studies major and the Global Climate and Environment major. In addition to coursework, the department operates a variety of interdisciplinary programs such as expeditions, field trips, competitions, and climate forums to foster talented students who can look at the climate crisis from a multifaceted perspective.

 

 

In particular, the InChina Forum is the result of a unique educational model that combines Chinese regional studies and the environment under the guidance of Professor Ik-Jun Moon of the Department of Chinese Studies, and was evaluated as “the result of efforts to steadily improve students' abilities through major classes, comparative programs, and academic clubs.” 

 

 

 

This content is translated from Korean to English using the AI translation service DeepL and may contain translation errors such as jargon/pronouns.

If you find any, please send your feedback to kookminpr@kookmin.ac.kr so we can correct them.

 

View original article [click]

Winner of the 3rd China-Japan Youth Idea Paper Competition / Chinese Political Science students

 

A research team of undergraduate students from Kookmin University's Department of Chinese Studies, majoring in Chinese Political Science, won the first prize at the third China-Korea Youth Idea Paper Contest held on Tuesday, September 3, at the Indochina Forum. 

 

 

 

 

 

The Indochina Forum is held annually in Incheon, and this year, more than 20 teams participated in the competition under the theme of “New China-Korea Cooperation for Progress”. In 2024, the event was co-hosted by Incheon Metropolitan City and the Embassy of the People's Republic of China in Korea, and eight organizations including the Incheon Institute, Incheon Chamber of Commerce, and the Modern China Society.

 

 

The winning team, Jae.Tan.Seng (Minhyung Kim, Jungmin Lee, Hyunghoon Park, and Kyujin Hwang), presented a paper titled “Reflections on China-ROK Carbon Cooperation: Focusing on the Joint Carbon Credit Market Program ‘TANAN’ between Chinese and Korean Universities,” which proposed a plan for environmental cooperation between the youth of China and Korea. The main contents include joint carbon measurement method, allocation method, joint declaration, and establishment of autonomous organizations in universities.

 

 

Kookmin University is the lead university of the five universities participating in the Humanities and Social Sciences (HUSS) Environment Consortium and actively supports student activities related to the environment. Kookmin University's Climate Change Response Project has established and operates convergence and interdisciplinary majors that link various majors and climate to foster humanities and social talents with convergent thinking under the theme of 'coexistence and co-prosperity in the era of climate crisis'. The 'Chinese Climate and Environment Major' is a representative example, which is a convergence of the Chinese Studies major and the Global Climate and Environment major. In addition to coursework, the department operates a variety of interdisciplinary programs such as expeditions, field trips, competitions, and climate forums to foster talented students who can look at the climate crisis from a multifaceted perspective.

 

 

In particular, the InChina Forum is the result of a unique educational model that combines Chinese regional studies and the environment under the guidance of Professor Ik-Jun Moon of the Department of Chinese Studies, and was evaluated as “the result of efforts to steadily improve students' abilities through major classes, comparative programs, and academic clubs.” 

 

 

 

This content is translated from Korean to English using the AI translation service DeepL and may contain translation errors such as jargon/pronouns.

If you find any, please send your feedback to kookminpr@kookmin.ac.kr so we can correct them.

 

View original article [click]

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