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Digital Asset Management (DAM) by Orange Logic
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SOUTH KOREA 2025. Jeju Haenyeo Fisheries System
SOUTH KOREA 2025. Ryou-jin Ko and her mother are haenyeo fisherwomen in Jeju
SOUTH KOREA 2025. Jeju Haenyeo Fisheries System
SOUTH KOREA 2025. Jeju Haenyeo Fisheries System
SOUTH KOREA 2025. Jeju Haenyeo Fisheries System
SOUTH KOREA 2025. Jeju Haenyeo Fisheries System
SOUTH KOREA 2025. Jeju Haenyeo Fisheries System
SOUTH KOREA 2025. Jeju Haenyeo Fisheries System
SOUTH KOREA 2025. Jeju Haenyeo Fisheries System
SOUTH KOREA 2025. Jeju Haenyeo Fisheries System
SOUTH KOREA 2025. Jeju Haenyeo Fisheries System
SOUTH KOREA 2025. Jeju Haenyeo Fisheries System
SOUTH KOREA 2025. Jeju Haenyeo Fisheries System
SOUTH KOREA 2025. Jeju Haenyeo Fisheries System
SOUTH KOREA 2025. Jeju Haenyeo Fisheries System
SOUTH KOREA 2025. Jeju Haenyeo Fisheries System
SOUTH KOREA 2025. Jeju Haenyeo Fisheries System
SOUTH KOREA 2025. Jeju Haenyeo Fisheries System
SOUTH KOREA 2025. Jeju Haenyeo Fisheries System
SOUTH KOREA 2025. Jeju Haenyeo Fisheries System
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SOUTH KOREA 2025. Jeju Haenyeo Fisheries System
4 July, 2025, Jeju, South Korea. Ryou-jin Ko poses for a portrait near her co-op’s house in Pyeongdae on the north eastern side of Jeju Island.
Ryou-jin Ko and her mother Suk-hee Park dive in the same co-op but being born in 1984 Ryou-jin Ko belongs to the “lost generation” of haenyeo.
Historically, the craft was passed down from mother to daughter, but especially since the 1980s, when haenyeo incomes rose due to increased seafood exports and Korea’s rapid modernization, many encouraged their children to pursue university education instead.
Photo credit must be given: ©FAO/David Hogsholt. Editorial use only. Copyright ©FAO.
07/04/2025
Country or Territory
Republic of Korea
Credit
© FAO / David Hogsholt
File size
18.21 MB
Unique ID
UF21AGG
Editorial use only. Photo credit must be given. For further information contact: Photo-Library@fao.org
Background Information
The haenyeo have been harvesting these waters for seafood for hundreds of years and until a few decades ago, 30,000 women would take to the sea almost daily. Now, the Haenyeo hardly number 5000 and more than two-thirds are over 60 years old, many are in their 80s.
Until recently it was believed that the culture would die out as very few of the haenyeos’ daughters were taking up the craft. But there’s now a real effort on keeping the ways of the Haenyeo alive. Two haenyeo schools have opened with the goal of preparing women from non-haenyeo families for a live in the trade.
Today, haenyeo are recognized as one of Jeju Island’s most important cultural assets—a significant shift in perception that has taken place over the past 20 years. Once seen as a fading or undervalued tradition, the haenyeo have gradually gained national and international recognition for their resilience, skill, and cultural importance. In acknowledgment of their unique role in the island’s heritage, the Korean government supports them by subsidizing their equipment, granting them exclusive rights to sell freshly harvested seafood. They also receive health care and pension benefits. In 2016, UNESCO included the haenyeo tradition on its Intangible Cultural Heritage list, bringing it international recognition.