Hakka Affairs Council Explained

Agency Name:Hakka Affairs Council
Nativename A:客家委員會
Nativename R:Hak-kâ Vî-yèn-fi (Hakka)
Kèjiā Wěiyuánhuì (Mandarin)
Formed:14 June 2001
Jurisdiction:Taiwan
Headquarters:Xinzhuang, New Taipei
Minister1 Name:Ku Hsiu-fei
Minister1 Pfo:Minister
Parent Agency:Executive Yuan

The Hakka Affairs Council (HAC;, Pha̍k-fa-sṳ: Hak-kâ Vî-yèn-fi) is a cabinet-level unit under the Executive Yuan of the government of Taiwan.[1] Its mission is to revitalize Hakka language and culture, and promoting Hakka cultural research and exchange.

History

The Hakka Affairs Council, officially established January 1, 2012, is a new agency resulting from the Executive Yuan’s structural reorganization. Its predecessor was the Council for Hakka Affairs, Executive Yuan, founded on June 14, 2001. The Council is the only central authority responsible for Hakka affairs in the world, and its mission is to revitalize Hakka language and culture, build a unifying Hakka identity promoting happiness, confidence and dignity, and become a global center for Hakka cultural research and exchange.

In order to catalyze the Hakka language revival and development, the Council re-structured two departments on January 18, 2021. The Department of Culture and Education is transformed into the Department of Language Development, undertaking the task of building Hakka language infrastructure and strengthening the ethnic language promotion. The Department of Communication and Marketing is re-organized as the Department of Art, Culture and Communication, dedicating to the development and marketing of Hakka cultural content industries.

Responsibilities

To promote ethnic mainstreaming and construct Hakka culture that can be shared by the public through cross-sector collaboration:

  1. To formulate Hakka policies and lay the foundation for the rule of law.
  2. To develop a Hakka language system and build a Hakka-friendly environment for local communities.
  3. To foster innovation of Hakka arts and share diverse cultures.
  4. To revitalize Hakka industries and rebuild community-based economy.
  5. To strengthen Hakka communication and enhance Hakka prestige.
  6. To cultivate Hakka citizens and enable them to connect global Hakka communities.
  7. To enrich Hakka cultural resources and find more opportunities for international exchanges.

Organizational structures

List of ministers

Political Party:

NameTerm of OfficeDaysPolitical PartyPremier
1Fan Kuang-chun (范光群)14 June 2001 31 January 2002 Democratic Progressive Party
2Yeh Chu-lan (葉菊蘭)1 February 2002 19 May 2004 Democratic Progressive PartyYu Shyi-kun
3Luo Wen-jia (羅文嘉)20 May 2004 14 March 2005 Democratic Progressive PartyYu Shyi-kun
Frank Hsieh
Lee Yung-te (李永得)15 March 2005 19 June 2005 Democratic Progressive PartyFrank Hsieh
4Lee Yung-te (李永得)20 June 2005 19 May 2008 Democratic Progressive Party
5Huang Yu-cheng (黃玉振)20 May 2008 7 July 2014[2] KuomintangLiu Chao-shiuan
Wu Den-yih
Sean Chen
Jiang Yi-huah
Liu Ching-chung (劉慶中)8 July 2014 4 August 2014 Jiang Yi-huah
6Liu Ching-chung (劉慶中)5 August 2014 31 January 2016 Jiang Yi-huah
Mao Chi-kuo
7Chung Wan-mei (鍾萬梅)1 February 2016 19 May 2016 Chang San-cheng
Lee Yung-te (李永得)20 May 2016 19 May 2020 Democratic Progressive Party
8Yiong Con-ziin (楊長鎮)20 May 2020 20 May 2024 Democratic Progressive PartySu Tseng-chang
Chen Chien-jen
9Ku Hsiu-fei (古秀妃)20 May 2024 Incumbent

See also

References

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 首頁 | 客家委員會全球資訊網.
  2. Longest serving minister.