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SHIN, EUI HANG (4) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   178168


Cohort Analysis on the Career Life Cycles of Players of the LPGA of Japan Tour / Shin, Eui Hang   Journal Article
Shin, Eui Hang Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract The purpose of this study is to investigate the patterns of professional career paths of the players of the Ladies Professional Golf Association of Japan (JLPGA) Tour. Using the athletes’ professional career life cycle model as the theoretical framework, this study will analyze the career development of elite players of the JLPGA from their rookie year to the point of retirement. The year of each JLPGA tournament win by selected players will be examined for the players’ entire careers. The players’ money ranking for each year of their careers is also analyzed to determine the stages of the players’ career life cycles. The tournament win span, i.e., the number of years between a player’s first and last JLPGA tournament win, will be computed. The career life cycles of players of different cohorts will be compared to determine whether or not there was any transformation in the structure of career stages of the players over time. The career development patterns of Japanese-born players will be compared with those of the international players of the JLPGA.
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2
ID:   061268


Correlates of the 2002 presidential election in South Korea: regionalism, the generation gap, anti Americanism, and the North Korea factor / Shin, Eui Hang Summer 2004  Journal Article
Shin, Eui Hang Journal Article
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Publication Summer 2004.
Key Words Regionalism  North Korea  Anti-American 
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3
ID:   180009


Gender, Transnational Migration, and Athletic Career Development: the Case of Korean Players on the LPGA of Japan Tour / Shin, Eui Hang   Journal Article
Shin, Eui Hang Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Ku Ok-hee became the first ever Korean female golfer to win a tournament on the LPGA of Japan Tour (JLPGA Tour) by her victory in the Kibun Ladies Classic on March 31, 1985. Since then, Korean players as a group have amassed 228 victories on the JLPGA Tour by the end of the 2019 season. Although this has been a truly remarkable accomplishment in the history of international sports, no systematic investigation has been conducted thus far about the factors that contributed to the success of Korean women players on the JLPGA Tour. The primary purpose of this study is to analyze the rise and fall of the Korean players on the JLPGA Tour from the perspective of their career life cycles. More specifically, this study will apply the career life cycle model to the career pathways of the players on the tour. Each individual player’s career history on the Korean LPGA Tour before the player’s transnational migration to the JLPGA Tour will be examined to ascertain whether or not the player’s pre-migration record is a reliable predictor of the post-migration performance on the JLPGA Tour. The number of tournament victories of each of the Korean players during the player’s entire career on the JLPGA Tour will be reviewed. The all-time history of each individual player’s money ranking on the tour will be investigated for both the active and the retired players. A cohort analysis method is used in investigating the tournament wins and money ranking history of the players by comparing the tournament win records and the all-time money rankings on the basis of the entry cohort to the JLPGA Tour.
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4
ID:   078586


State, Society, and Economic Development in Sports Life Cycles: the case of boxing in Korea / Shin, Eui Hang   Journal Article
Shin, Eui Hang Journal Article
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Publication 2007.
Summary/Abstract This study documents the rise and fall of boxing in Korea since its introduction in 1912. The participation of amateur athletes in boxing has decreased sharply since the 1980s. Also, the popularity of professional boxing among sports fans has diminished in recent decades. I consider boxing as a "product" that is "consumed" by individuals as participants and fans. I apply product life-cycle theory in analyzing the changing popularity of boxing. I argue that changes in the tastes of sports fans are closely linked to economic development, industrialization and standard of living. I present the rise in the popularity of soccer, baseball, and golf as illustrations of the changing tastes of consumers of sports that have accompanied economic development and social changes as well as the changing government policies on sports
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