With strong government thrusts toward agricultural trade liberalization to
increase high-tech export volume, South Korea’s rural communities have had
to brace for significant adjustments brought about by agrarian modernization.
Rural “development” of the past few decades has failed to restructure the farming
sector for international competition, largely due to favoritism toward big
corporations and ineffective government policies characterized by top-down
management and minimal communication efforts. Following such shortcomings,
the considerable reduction in the number of farms and a widespread
realization that reform has to come “organically” from within organized rural
communities, rather than imposed by development, this paper argues for possible
change through human agency and shows how one community is tackling
“self-reform” toward a more sustainable life in a globalizing rural area,
while trying to dodge the global reflexes from overemphasized modernity.