Regulating membership and movement at the meso-level: citizen-making and the household registration system in East Asia

This paper analyses how East Asian states have regulated membership and migration through meso-level institutions. Specifically, the authors examine how states have used the household registration system (China’s hukou system, South Korea’s hoju/hojeok system, and Japan’s koseki system) in the process of nation-state building in the early post-World War Two period, as a security measure to control movement throughout the Cold War, and as a tool to build or sever trans-border kinship ties in the contemporary era. Drawing on the literature on multi-level citizenship, the article contributes to the growing scholarship that unpacks the civic-ethnic divide in comparative citizenship studies by examining how meso-level institutions shape national-level membership in countries that are commonly characterised as having ‘ethnic’ citizenship regimes.

Erin Aeran Chung, Darcie Draudt, Yunchen Tian, Regulating membership and movement at the meso-level: citizen-making and the household registration system in East Asia, Citizenship Studies, 2020.