Korean Studies Numerus Clausus

Korean Studies Programs in Germany with Admission Restriction - Numerus Clausus/NC (2026/27)

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Korean Studies programs in Germany offer international students surprising access to East Asian expertise, studying where Europe's fascination with Korean Wave meets serious academic scholarship—in a nation hosting the largest Korean diaspora in Europe (40,000+) and maintaining deep economic ties through companies like Samsung's European headquarters in Frankfurt, creating specialists who understand Korea beyond K-pop and kimchi to decode a nation rapidly transforming from war-torn to cultural superpower. These interdisciplinary English-taught degrees explore Korea's remarkable trajectory through unique European perspectives: students master Hangul's logical writing system while analyzing how Korean democratization inspired global movements, investigate chaebols' economic dominance comparing with German Mittelstand models, examine how BTS conquered Western markets through digital innovation, understand divided Korea's implications for global security, and discover why German scholarship on Korea provides critical distance unavailable in emotionally-charged neighboring countries—learning that Korean studies reveals broader lessons about development, democracy, and cultural soft power. Germany's growing Korean connections provide practical advantages through expanding networks: Korean companies establishing European operations requiring cultural mediators, universities partnering with prestigious Korean institutions like KAIST, cultural centers promoting everything from traditional pansori to contemporary cinema, research collaborations in technology and green energy, and vibrant Korean student communities enriching campus life.

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Most Selective Korean Studies Programs

For degree courses with a numerus clausus, part of the study places are allocated according to the grade point average (GPA) of the previous degree. Selection is generally based on how many applicants apply for a place. The higher the grade, the more difficult it is to get onto the course. The German grading system ranges from 1.0 (very good) to 6.0 (unsatisfactory).
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Top 1 Most Selective Korean Studies Program (based on Numerus Clausus)

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Top 0 Most Selective Korean Studies University

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Korean Studies in Germany: All Admission-Restricted Programs

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Korean Studies NC: Glossary

Numerus Clausus (NC)
This Latin term means “limited number” and indicates that a program has restricted admission. In other words, not all applicants can be accepted, so selection is usually based on grades or other criteria when demand exceeds available spots.
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