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The ‘Region’ in Korean Health Care: A Critical Discourse Analysis on How Regions are Named and Its Effects

Title
The ‘Region’ in Korean Health Care: A Critical Discourse Analysis on How Regions are Named and Its Effects
Alternative Author(s)

Park, Seohwa ; Kim, Jin-Hwan

Keyword
Region ; Local ; Zone ; Health Policy ; Regional Inequalities
Publication Year
2024-12-31
Publisher
Korea Institute for Health and Social Affairs
Citation
Health and Social Welfare Review Vol.44 No.4, pp.318-343
Abstract
While 'region' is frequently invoked as a site of intersectional inequality in Korean healthcare policy, its meaning and nuances remain ambiguous. This study applied critical discourse analysis to 120 laws and related policy documents issued by the Ministry of Health and Welfare to examine the usage of the term 'region' in Korean healthcare and its political effects. We first reviewed literature from various disciplines dealing with 'region' to establish theoretical reference points, examined how the term has been introduced and applied in public health, and explained the meaning of geographical space within the nation-state based on these theoretical perspectives. Our analysis of policy documents revealed that space within the nation-state was referred to in three main ways: 'Ji-bang' (지방; local), 'Ji-yeok' (지역; region), and 'Gwon-yeok' (권역; zone). While 'Ji-bang' more closely refers to administrative units within the nation-state, 'Ji-yeok' was used in connection with fluid spatial units rather than administrative units and was closely linked with residents living within that space. In contrast, 'Gwon-yeok' was used to refer to relatively larger spatial areas, but terms like 'living zone' and 'medical care zone' appeared redundantly with almost indistinguishable usage from 'region,' causing confusion for local governments implementing healthcare policies. As terms representing regional space were arbitrarily used according to central government needs, a contradictory situation emerged where regional subjects, contrasted with the center, were simultaneously targets of guidance due to lack of capability while being expected to solve their own problems. It is time to examine the power dynamics underpinning this inconsistent and contradictory usage and reorganize healthcare spaces from residents' perspectives.
ISSN
1226-072X
DOI
10.15709/hswr.2024.44.4.318
KIHASA Research
Subject Classification
General social security > Regional social security
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