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victim advocacy

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  • 2020.09.18 08:38
  •  Kim Ye‑won is the founder and sole staff member of the Disability Rights Law Center, a Seoul‑based nonprofit that provides free legal support to disabled people, women, and children who have suffered human rights violations. She handles everything from initial counseling and paperwork to policy research, splitting her time between her office in Seocho and family life in Gwangju. Despite a grueling schedule and frequent calls, Kim draws energy from her work and was recognized this year with the 12th Young Ilga Award for her public‑interest contributions.

    Born with vision loss in one eye due to a medical error, Kim decided early on to become a lawyer so she could stand by individuals rather than just make objective rulings. After training at the Judicial Research and Training Institute, she helped establish a public‑interest legal fund and worked with organizations such as Dongcheon and the Seoul Disability Rights Center, where she handled over 1,000 cases and helped secure precedent recognizing prosthetic leg damage as a work injury. In 2017 she founded the Disability Rights Law Center to expand her ability to take on sensitive and systemic cases; the center operates without charging clients, relying on the legal fund and income from lectures and research.

    Kim emphasizes solidarity and empowerment in her approach: many victims do not recognize their own abuse or feel able to speak out, and gaining their trust is the first step toward justice. She credits coalition work with other groups and activists for untangling complex cases and takes strength from seeing clients reclaim their voices in court and in life. Kim also calls for moving beyond rigid divisions—such as normal/abnormal or disabled/non‑disabled—and instead fostering inclusive, collective solutions to social problems.


    Original source: [만남] 김예원 장애인권법센터 변호사 “피해자 곁에 서겠습니다” (Source: the news outlet; please refer to the original article.)

    2021.01.07 10:17

    In the wake of the widely publicized Jeong‑in child‑abuse case, the National Assembly rushed forward with more than a dozen bills proposing stiffer penalties and mandatory immediate separation of children after two abuse reports. Kim Ye‑won, a public‑interest lawyer who has worked with child and youth victims, cautions that many of these measures—some of which mirror amendments already passed—are politically popular but could do more harm than good if enacted without careful design.

    Kim’s core concern is that raising statutory maximums or especially minimum sentences changes how prosecutors and judges handle cases: higher potential penalties increase the evidentiary bar for conviction, encouraging prosecutors to decline to indict weakly evidenced cases and prompting judges to demand stronger proof, which can result in more dismissals or acquittals. She points to recent experience in cases of sexual violence against people with disabilities, where tougher penalties coincided with reduced prosecution rates, and warns that heavier punishment regimes also prolong and intensify trauma for victims through repeated, invasive questioning. She also flags mandatory “immediate separation” policies as problematic—both because some versions are redundant with recent law changes and because blunt removal rules can have unintended consequences for children and families.

    Rather than headline-grabbing sentencing hikes, Kim recommends targeted, practitioner‑informed reforms: revise and strengthen judicial sentencing guidelines (양형 기준) so courts impose appropriate punishments in practice; invest in investigative capacity, evidence collection, and victim‑centered procedures to secure convictions without retraumatizing victims; and design statutory changes in consultation with front‑line child‑welfare and legal professionals. Her message is a cautionary one: symbolic or politically reactive bills risk nullifying public attention and may fail victims unless lawmakers focus on effective, evidence‑based fixes.


    Original source: [인터뷰] 학대아동 지원 변호사 “이런 법안이면 정인이 얼굴 공개된 값어치 없다” (Source: the news outlet; please refer to the original article.)