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South Korea’s Evolving North Korean Policy and Changes in the US-ROK Alliance

* The United Nations members who participated in the Korean War are standing.   @iStock   Il Young Jeong Research Professor_Institute of Social Sciences_Sogang University The Korean War did not end, but rather ‘concluded’ with a mutual cessation of hostilities. Under the armistice agreement, the Cold War endured on the peninsula with the trilateral alliance between the US, South Korea, and Japan on one side and the North Korea-China-Russia trilateral alliance on the other. While the dissolution of the Soviet Union may have ended the Cold War in Europe, the Cold War persisted on the peninsula.  In this chapter, we will look at how South Korea’s policies regarding North Korea have evolved since the end of the Korean War and how the US-ROK alliance has responded to the problems that have arisen in pursuit of these policies.   South Korea’s “Nordpolitik” Policy and the End of the Cold War between the United States and Soviet Union As the Cold War between the United State...

Unification Attitude Surveys

The Institute for Peace and Unification Studies at Seoul National University and the Korean Institute for National Unification (KINU) both conduct regular surveys on attitudes towards unification. To the best of my knowledge, these reports are only available in Korean. 2022 Surveys:  Seoul University      KINU

Minjok

The “minjok” (민족, 民族) is a key concept for all Korea watchers, but can be difficult to slot neatly into Western frameworks of statehood and nationality. The concept of “minjok” arose contemporaneous to Woodrow Wilson’s “self-determination,” the idea that a people sharing an established territory, common language, history, culture, and race have a right to sovereignty and statehood. This last point is perhaps the most controversial since it fails to account for ethnically heterogeneous melting-pot nations, including the United States itself. The early notion of Korean nationhood that arose during the Korean Independence movement focused on these shared characteristics of Korean-ness, especially race (perhaps in direct response to the race-based rhetoric of the Japanese colonizers). The Korean minjok is an ideal of the Korean people, an ethnically homogeneous group that despite a long history of influence under the Chinese and Japanese remained ethnically pure with a distinct language an...

North Korea’s State Revenue and Non-Tax Burdens

For those who can read Korean, KDI has a comprehensive and detailed breakdown of the North Korean government's overall revenue structure here . For English language writing on the various ways the North Korean government taxes its citizens despite the country having formally abolished taxes, I shamelessly suggest my own article on 38 North .

Inminbanjang

Inminbanjang, typically middle-aged married women, are the heads of housing unit blocks (called inminban). The inminbanjang is responsible for reporting on the comings and goings of residents, monitoring for improper behavior, and mobilizing households for various social tasks.

North Korean Political Factions

  The “Soviet faction” was largely composed of Soviet-Koreans who had entered the Peninsula during the Soviet occupation towards the end of WWII and entered the North Korean Communist Party on the basis of their membership in the Soviet Communist Party. The “Yan’an faction” refers to Koreans who had fought against the Japanese in the Yan’an area of China alongside the Chinese Communist Party.