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The Korean Culture and Information Service (KOCIS; Korean: 해외문화홍보원; Hanja: 海外文化弘報院) is an affiliated organization of the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism[1] of the South Korean government and runs 32 Korean cultural centers in 27 countries. The goal of the organization is to further enhance the image of Korea's national brand by promoting Korean heritage and arts through these cultural centers.
Founded | 1971 |
---|---|
Founder | Government of South Korea |
Type | Cultural institution |
Focus | Korean culture, Korean language |
Location |
|
Area served | 27 Countries |
Key people | Park Jung-Youl (Director) |
Website | www.kocis.go.kr/eng/main.do# |
It was announced in January 2024 that the service would shut down and become a part of the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism.[2]
Main missions
editThis article may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia's quality standards. The specific problem is: WP:MISSION. (March 2024) |
¤ To upgrade the country's nation brand and to publicize government policies
- Carrying out projects to boost the nation brand
- Providing support for summit diplomacy by organizing cultural events and operating press centers during presidential visits abroad
- Promoting Korea's key administrative priorities and major government policies around the world
¤ To promote the spread of Hallyu and to expand cultural exchanges
- Operating overseas cultural centers and strengthening their cultural exchange function
- Organizing various international cultural exchange programs
- Expanding cultural experience programs for foreign nationals living in Korea
¤ To produce promotional content and to facilitate its use
- Producing and distributing promotional content about Korea for use overseas
- Carrying out online promotion through Korea.net, the official government multilingual web portal
¤ To foster cooperative media relations
- Providing support to foreign correspondents and visiting journalists in their coverage of Korea
- Operating the Foreign Press Center Korea
- Organizing invitational programs for media professionals from around the world
In its early years, as the Korean Overseas Information Service (KOIS), it also issued foreign language propaganda reports, such as on the Third Tunnel of Aggression.[3]
History
editDecember 1971 — Inaugurated as the Korean Overseas Information Service (KOIS) under the Ministry of Culture and Information.
January 1990 - Affiliated with the Ministry of Information upon the division of the Ministry of Culture and Information into two separate ministries.
February 1998 - Affiliated with the Ministry of Culture and Tourism upon the disbandment of the Ministry of Information, and its name changed to the Korean Overseas Culture and Information Service (KOCIS).
May 1999 - Affiliated with the newly launched Government Information Agency, and its name reverted to Korean Overseas Information Service(KOCIS)
February 2008 - Affiliated with the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism (MCST) in accordance with a revision to the Government Organization Act, and its name changed to the Korean Culture and Information Service (KOCIS).
February 2012 - Transferred responsibilities for the missions and tasks entrusted with the Korean Cultural Centers and Culture and Information Officers to the International Cultural Affairs Division of the MCST
September 2013 - Reassumed responsibilities for supporting and evaluating the Korean Cultural Centers and Culture and Information Officers as well as for specific executions of the Centers' programs from the International Cultural Affairs Division of the MCST
January 2015 - Reassumed the full remaining responsibilities for the work of the Korean Cultural Centers and Culture and Information Officers form the International Cultural Affairs Division of the MCST
Initiatives
editWeb portal of the government
editKOCIS manages KOREA.net, the official web portal of the South Korean government.[4]
References
edit- ^ "Welcome to the website of the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism of the Republic of Korea". Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism. Retrieved 2018-05-15.
- ^ "KOCIS to close after 50 years; culture ministry to absorb functions". The Korea Times. 2024-01-18. Retrieved 2024-07-27.
- ^ Secret Tunnel Under Panmunjom (PDF) (Report). Korean Overseas Information Service. October 1978. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 2 January 2016.
- ^ KOCIS, Korean Culture and Information Service