
The Mobility Humanities Research Center at Konkuk University, under the leadership of Director Shin In‑seop, has successfully concluded its seven-year voyage of publishing a comprehensive 62-volume series in the field of mobility humanities.
The latest additions include one original research volume, Connections: Arts and Humanities for Just Mobility Futures, and two translated volumes, After Geoengineering and The Mobility Transition Movement. These are available in open access and published in English, Italian, and Korean, offering global accessibility.
The original volume was produced in collaboration with international scholars, supported by the UK Research and Innovation (UKRI), and examines the cultural and infrastructural dimensions of mobility from a humanistic perspective.
The Center, selected in 2018 for the HK+ humanistic agenda “Co‑evolution of Humans and Technology,” has emerged as a leading platform in mobility humanities both domestically and internationally. Building on this success, it has now been selected for the six-year HK 3.0 initiative, focusing on the new theme of Infra‑humanities to investigate the relationship between infrastructure and human life.