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2023.08.28 15:01
In “I Didn’t Know It Would Hurt,” public-interest lawyer Kim Ye-won—who represents and stands in solidarity with people with disabilities and other marginalized crime victims—draws readers into the lived realities of prejudice, exclusion, and everyday violence. Writing from personal and professional experience (she is visually impaired herself), Kim illustrates how thoughtless words, looks, and actions can wound, and she challenges the tendency to label disabled people as “weak” rather than as full, distinct individuals deserving of dignity and equal treatment.

The book also examines how crises like the pandemic intensified isolation for people with mobility or immune vulnerabilities and exposed gaps in legal and social protections. Kim’s candid lectures and advocacy work underline the emotional and systemic toll of exclusion while arguing for a society that recognizes ordinary humanity and equal worth. Her account emphasizes that respecting people with disabilities requires structural support as well as a cultural shift in how we see and speak about difference.

Ultimately the book is a call to action: move beyond one-off sympathy to sustained change by becoming more conscious of language and everyday behavior. Kim urges readers to reflect on moments of complicity, replace derogatory expressions with respectful ones, and support continuous disability-rights education. Small, consistent practices—choosing words carefully, acknowledging vulnerability, and standing in solidarity—are presented as the practical starting points for long-term social transformation.


Original source: 무심코 사용하는 비하의 말을 존중의 말로 (Source: the news outlet; please refer to the original article.)

2019.03.18 09:30
Kim Ye-won, a public-interest lawyer and well-known disability rights activist, has published a new book collecting her advocacy stories entitled “누구나 꽃이 피었습니다” (Everyone’s Flowers Bloomed). Known for powerful public images—like taking her baby to court—Kim draws on her experiences supporting disabled clients to reveal everyday injustices and the human side of legal work. The book foregrounds real cases and the people behind them, presented in accessible, narrative form for general readers.

A distinctive feature of the book is how Kim uses scenes from popular films as entry points to discuss legal and social issues. For example, she links the sloth workers in Zootopia to the labor realities faced by people with developmental disabilities and uses a scene from the film Marathon to explore barriers to judicial access for disabled individuals. Beyond individual cases, the author explains how to support and advocate for social minorities and details her involvement in both casework and systemic reform efforts.

Kim’s aim was to make rights-focused stories approachable—even for readers who aren’t film fans—by highlighting everyday human rights dilemmas and practical advocacy lessons. She hopes readers take away a simple but powerful message: like flowers that differ in color and scent, diverse people are each inherently dignified. The book offers both compassionate storytelling and concrete insights for activists, legal professionals, and any reader interested in social justice.


Original source: [법조계 신간 엿보기]누구나 꽃이 피었습니다 (Source: the news outlet; please refer to the original article.)

2014.12.02 19:12 article
Recent reporting highlights that community-based disability rights advocacy in Korea is struggling to keep up with systemic problems. Local centers and organizations play a vital role—documenting abuses, supporting complaints, and raising public awareness—but face resource constraints, overlapping responsibilities, and legal blind spots that limit their effectiveness.

Practical issues underscore the problem: the government has moved to standardize the name of disability documents under a single “disability registration card,” but broader policy failures remain. Low employment rates (around 34%) and modest average monthly wages (approximately 2,153,000 KRW) reflect a poverty trap that undermines work incentives. High-profile discrimination cases, rising legal claims, and persistent human-rights violations show that advocacy alone can’t substitute for stronger legal protections and social supports.

Advocates are calling for urgent legislative and structural reforms — including passage of comprehensive disability-rights legislation and targeted laws such as support for people with brain lesions — alongside better funding, clearer mandates for local centers, and coordinated national oversight. Strengthening legal remedies, updating the Basic Livelihood Security framework, and improving service delivery are presented as immediate priorities to turn advocacy gains into durable rights and inclusion.


Original source: 지역밀착형 장애인권리옹호 서비스 ‘한계’ (Source: the news outlet; please refer to the original article.)