Songbun (Serbo-Croatian Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Songbun" in Serbo-Croatian language version.

refsWebsite
Global rank Serbo-Croatian rank
1st place
1st place
6th place
5th place
5,141st place
low place
low place
low place
low place
low place
5,506th place
2,309th place
low place
low place

archive.org (Global: 6th place; Serbo-Croatian: 5th place)

atimes.com (Global: 5,506th place; Serbo-Croatian: 2,309th place)

hrnk.org (Global: low place; Serbo-Croatian: low place)

kinu.or.kr (Global: low place; Serbo-Croatian: low place)

nknews.org (Global: 5,141st place; Serbo-Croatian: low place)

web.archive.org (Global: 1st place; Serbo-Croatian: 1st place)

winzigconsultingservices.com (Global: low place; Serbo-Croatian: low place)

  • Jerry Winzig. „A Look at North Korean Society” (book review of Kim Il-song's North Korea by Helen-Louise Hunter). winzigconsultingservices.com. Pristupljeno June 8, 2011. »In North Korea, one's songbun, or socio-economic and class background, is extremely important and is primarily determined at birth. People with the best songbun are descendants of the anti-Japanese guerrillas who fought with Kim Il-song, followed by people whose parents or grandparents were factory workers, laborers, or poor, small farmers in 1950. "Ranked below them in descending order are forty-seven distinct groups in what must be the most class-differentiated society in the world today." Anyone with a father, uncle, or grandfather who owned land or was a doctor, Christian minister, merchant, or lawyer has low songbun.«