RSVP Now!
RSVP Now!
Wednesday, February 11, 2026 
3:30 p.m. - 5:00 p.m. EDT 
Hybrid Event  
Elliott School of International Affairs, Room 505 
1957 E ST NW, Washington DC 
Virtual via Zoom
Register Here!

Event Description 

Since 2003, South Korea has consistently recorded the highest suicide rates among member countries of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). This trend has unfolded alongside a persistently low birth rate and overall population decline, changes that parallel the country’s neoliberal turn in the late 1990s. In response, the Korean government launched a state-led suicide prevention initiative in 2005, influenced by frameworks promoted by the World Health Organization (WHO). Despite more than two decades of continuation and expansion, the initiative has produced a limited measurable impact, as reflected in the persistently high numbers and rates of suicide currently.

In this presentation, Kwon examines South Korea’s state-led suicide prevention project by tracing how suicide and care are conceptualized and implemented within administrative systems and institutional practices. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork conducted between 2021 and 2022 while volunteering at multiple public suicide prevention centers and non-governmental organizations in South Korea, she explores how prevention efforts translate complex distress into standardized categories, protocols, and measurable outcomes. While these processes enable programmatic coherence, monitoring, and assessment, they also narrow how suicide and care are understood and addressed, limiting the scope of empathetic engagement and practical support available to individuals in crisis.

Program (PDF)

Speaker

Jung Eun Kwon 
Jung Eun Kwon is the Postdoctoral Fellow at the GW Institute for Korean Studies. She is a cultural and medical anthropologist whose research examines the intersection of mental health, gender, and global and local health systems and governance in South Korea. Her current book project, tentatively titled Reclaiming Suicidality and Care: Young Women, Suicide, and the State Intervention in South Korea, examines how young South Korean women experience and conceptualize suicide and how they reimagine care in response to state-led prevention initiatives. She received her PhD in Anthropology with an Asian Studies Certificate from the University of Pittsburgh. 

Moderator

Roy Richard Grinker
Roy Richard Grinker is Professor of Anthropology, International Affairs, and Human Sciences at the George Washington University. He is a cultural anthropologist specializing in ethnicity, nationalism, and psychological anthropology, with topical expertise in autism, Korea, and sub-Saharan Africa. He has conducted research on a variety of subjects: ethnic relationships between farmers and foragers in the Ituri forest, Democratic Republic of Congo; North and South Korean relations, with special emphasis on North Korean defectors’ adaptation to South Korea life; and the epidemiology of autism. In addition, he has written a biography of the anthropologist Colin M. Turnbull and his new book Nobody’s Normal: How Culture Created the Stigma of Mental Illness (W.W. Norton). He was Interim Director of the GW Institute for Korean Studies for the Fall 2016 semester.
Please note the event is on the record and open to the public.
The event will be recorded and made available on GWIKS’ YouTube channel.
Founded in the year 2016, the GW Institute for Korean Studies (GWIKS) is a university wide Institute housed in the Elliott School of International Affairs at the George Washington University. The establishment of the GWIKS in 2016 was made possible by a generous grant from the Academy of Korean Studies (AKS). The mission of GWIKS is to consolidate, strengthen, and grow the existing Korean studies program at GW, and more generally in the greater D.C. area and beyond. The Institute enables and enhances productive research and education relationships within GW, and among the many experts throughout the region and the world. 
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