

Currently, Professor Kim serves as a chairman of the Scientific Panel of IUSSP and chairman of the Board of the Population Association of Korea. He is also the director of the Korea Social Science Data Archive. In recognition of his active consultation to the Korean government as well as academic contributions, he was awarded the Order of Service Merit from the president of Korea in 2004.
His current research focuses on low fertility, population aging and marriage migration in Asia. He has published 31 books and monographs, 120 journal articles and book chapters. His latest publication is about Cross-border Marriage: Process and Dynamics.
■ Selected Publications
– “Immigrant Social Capital, Adaptation and Fertility among Foreign Wives in Korea,” Population and Society, 5(2): 25-50, 2009.
– “Theoretical Explanations of Rapid Fertility Decline in Korea,” The Japanese Journal of Population, 3(1): 2-25, 2005.

Professor Lee has taught various courses such as Economic Sociology, Organizational Sociology, Sociology of Firm and Comparative Sociology.
Professor Lee, a leading authority on corporate social responsibility (CSR), is the author or co-author of 8 books. His book, ‘Business Environment and Managerial Strategy in 21st Century’ (2002), has played a key role in introducing CSR as an important academic field. ‘The Great Transformation of National Strategy’ (2001), has also been a cornerstone in establishing social network concept in Korea.
He has authored more than 40 articles in leading academic journals such as Korean Journal of Sociology, Civil Society & NGO, Journal of Consumption Culture, Korean NPO Review, Information and Society and Journal of Social Science Studies. His research interests include corporate social responsibility, corporate-NGO relations, non-tariff trade barriers, high-end good market and digital divide.
■ Selected Publications
– Comparative Study of the Automobile Industry in Japan and Korea: From Visible to Invisible Barriers. Asian Survey 51(5): 876-898, 2011
– The Nature of the Dual CSR System: An International Comparative Analysis-US, Germany, Japan, and Korea. Korean Journal of Sociology, 42(7): 215-253, 2008.

Professor Kim is an associate professor in the Major of Sociology at Hanyang University. He received his B.A. from Hanyang University, and M.A. and Ph.D. in Sociology from Stanford University.
Before joining the Hanyang faculty, he served as (tenure-track) an assistant professor of Sociology at the University of Missouri at Columbia. His current teaching and research interests include sociology of organizations, sociology of work, social networks, and sociology of family and marriages.
His works have been published in internationally recognized journals such as American Sociological Review, Sociological Inquiry, and Research in Political Sociology. Professor Kim served as the chair of Sociology Major at Hanyang University (2009-2011).
■ Selected Publications
– 2011. “The Impact of International Migration on Unemployment Rates in Urban America,” Journal of International and Area Studies 18(1): 49-64.
– 2011. “A Comparative Study of the Relationship between Production Regimes and Workers` Commitment,” Korean Journal of Sociology 45(3): 171-193.

■ Selected Publications
– Kim, H., Ji, J., & Kao, D. (2011). Burnout and physical health among social workers: A three-year longitudinal study. Social Work. Social Work, 56(3), 258-268.
– Kim, H., Chenot, D., & Ji, J (2011). Racial/ethnic disparity in child welfare systems: A longitudinal study utilizing the Disparity Index (DI). Children and Youth Services Review, 33. 1234-1244.

His works has been published in many recognized journals such as Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, Child Development, and Development and Psychopathology.
■ Selected Publications
– Kochanska, Grazyna and Sanghag Kim. 2013. “Early Attachment Organization with Both Parents and Self-Reported Behavior Problems: From Infancy to Middle Childhood.” Child Development 84: 283-296.
– Kochanska, Grazyna, Sanghag Kim, and Jamie Koenig Nordling. 2012. “Challenging Circumstances Moderate the Links Between Mothers’ Personality Traits and Their Parenting in Low-Income Families with Young Children.” Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 103(6): 1040- 1049.