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Kim, Kwang Chung; Hurh, Won Moo – International Migration Review, 1985
Korean entrepreneurs rely heavily on their ethnic resources for both business formation and operation. While such resource utilization facilitates immigrants' business entry and gives them competitive advantage in the general marketplace, the same mechanism poses the problems of entra-ethnic business competition and precarious position as a…
Descriptors: Business, Entrepreneurship, Group Unity, Korean Americans

Hurh, Won Moo; Kim, Kwang Chung – International Migration Review, 1990
A study of 334 Korean male immigrants in the Chicago area reveals that their mental well-being is likely to increase with length of residency and that the most significant variable is occupational satisfaction. (DM)
Descriptors: Acculturation, Immigrants, Interviews, Korean Americans

Hurh, Won Moo; Kim, Kwang Chung – International Migration Review, 1984
"Adhesive adaptation" occurs when aspects of a new culture and social relations with members of the host society are added on to immigrants' traditional culture and social networks, without replacing or modifying any significant part of the old. Interviews with 615 Korean immigrants empirically confirmed this adaptation model. (Author/KH)
Descriptors: Acculturation, Biculturalism, Cultural Pluralism, Ethnic Groups
Hurh, Won Moo – 1998
The history and culture of Korean immigrants to the United States are described in the following chapters: (1) "Korean Ethnic Roots: The Land, History, People, and Culture"; (2) "Korean Immigration to the United States: A Historical Overview"; (3) "Economic Adjustment"; (4) "Cultural and Social Adaptation";…
Descriptors: Acculturation, Adjustment (to Environment), Cultural Awareness, Cultural Differences

Kim, Kwang Chung; Hurh, Won Moo – Amerasia Journal, 1983
Examines the validity and implications of the success image of Asian Americans through a case study of recent Korean immigrants in Los Angeles. Asserts that Asian Americans are generally excluded from full participation in the broader society and that this exclusion cannot be interpreted as an expression of personal preference. (KH)
Descriptors: Asian Americans, Case Studies, Economic Opportunities, Employment Level
Hurh, Won Moo; Kim, Kwang Chung – 1979
In the past the economic dimension of ethnic assimilation has usually been studied in terms of occupational discrimination. This paper argues that the economic dimension of ethnic relations can best be studied through a broader theoretical framework: occupational assimilation. Occupational assimilation includes the entire process involved in the…
Descriptors: Acculturation, Economic Factors, Equal Opportunities (Jobs), Ethnic Relations
Hurh, Won Moo – 1977
The main purpose of this paper is to analyze the life choices and life styles of Korean immigrants in comparison to other ethnic minorities, particularly other Asians, in the United States. Factors contributing to differential degrees of cultural assimilation among the Asian immigrants are analyzed along three dimensions: (1) objective; (2)…
Descriptors: Acculturation, Asian Americans, Cross Cultural Studies, Cultural Differences
Hurh, Won Moo – 1967
The nature and extent of the problems involved in the socialization of mixed-race children of American servicemen and Korean women is discussed. Observations and interviews find these factors significant in constituting the social marginality of such children: (a) the stigma of illegitimacy, (b) the mothers' undesirable occupational status…
Descriptors: Adoption (Ideas), Child Welfare, Educationally Disadvantaged, Emotional Development