Abstract

There are roughly 500,000 who live in the former About two-thirds live in Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan, and the remaining third mostly in Russia. A small number of also live in Kyrgyzstan, Ukraine, Turkmenistan, Belarus, and elsewhere. This widespread dispersal of the population resulted from the repression of the Stalinist era and subsequent migration within the Both in academic literature and the vernacular, the term Soviet Koreans was commonly used to refer to all living in the unified and everlasting Union. During this period, the population referred to themselves as either Koryo Saram or Choson Saram interchangeably, but in the last ten years, both at home and abroad, the term Koryo Saram has become the preferred term.

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