원문정보
초록
영어
Youth social isolation has emerged as a pressing governance challenge shaped by cumulative developmental, relational, and structural vulnerabilities rather than individual choice. Despite its long-term social consequences, it remains weakly integrated into disaster and crisis policy frameworks. This study reframes youth social isolation as a slow-building disaster and examines how policy responses can address its temporal and relational dimensions. Drawing on interdisciplinary conceptual synthesis and cross-national policy insights, the study develops an integrative framework linking youth isolation, loneliness, attachment, and digital risk. The findings highlight convergent policy strategies centered on prevention, mental health support, community reconnection, and proactive outreach, while identifying gaps in long-term governance capacity, outreach infrastructure, and digital safety systems. The study argues that adopting a slow-disaster perspective can strengthen policy coherence, support sustained recovery, and reposition youth isolation as a core agenda in social risk governance.
목차
Ⅰ. Introduction
Ⅱ. Theoretical Background
1. Youth Social Isolation as a Relational and Structural Condition
2. Loneliness, Attachment, and Accumulated Relational Trauma
3. Online Crime Vulnerability in the Context of Social Isolation
Ⅲ. Conceptual Framework: Youth Social Isolation As a Slow-Building Disaster
1. Why a Slow-Building Disaster Framework?
2. Analytical Approach and Framework Development
3. Core Dimension of Youth Isolation As a Slow-Building Disaster
4. Analytical Implications for Crisis Studies
Ⅳ. Methodology
1. Research Design
2. Literature Selection Criteria and Data Sources
3. Analytical Procedure and Synthesis Process
4. Methodological Limitations
Ⅴ. Online Crime As Cascading Crisis among Socially Isolated Youth
1. Applying the Slow-Building Disaster Framework to Online Crime
2. Why Socially Isolated Youth Face Heightened Online Crime Vulnerability
3. Structural Safety Blind Spots in Digital Environments
4. Online Crime As a Cascading Crisis
5. Analytical Implications
Ⅵ. Discussion
1. Youth Isolation As a Slow-Building Disaster
2. Structural and Relational Drivers of Youth Isolation
3. Digital Risk As a Secondary Disaster
4. Youth Isolation and Crisis Governance
5. Victimhood, Recognition, and Compounded Harm
6. Policy and Practice Implications
Ⅶ. Policy Implications: Governing Invisible Risk in a Slow-Building Disaster
1. From Event-Based Intervention to Temporal Governance
2. Addressing Structural Safety Blind Spots through Proactive Outreach
3. Integrating Relational Safety into Digital Crime Prevention
4. Institutional Feasibility within Short-Term Administrative Systems
Ⅷ. Conclusion
References
