ID | 092926 |
Title Proper | Anatomy of North Korea's foreign policy formulation |
Language | ENG |
Author | Koga, Kei |
Publication | 2009. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | Since 2003, a series of Six-Party Talks has attempted to halt North Korea's nuclear development; nonetheless, considering the development of North Korean nuclear capability, the talks are often regarded as an ineffective framework. In order to break through such a situation, first and foremost it is imperative to understand the nature of North Korean foreign policy. In this paper, I argue that North Korean foreign policy can be explained by neoclassical realism: the international distribution of power is interpreted by its domestic political system based on the self-reliance (Juche) ideology and the supreme leader (Suryong) political structure, whose basis is its Confucian culture, and I argue that this perception has predominantly determined its foreign policy decision-making. |
`In' analytical Note | North Korean Review Vol. 5, No. 2; Fall 2009: p.21 - 33 |
Journal Source | North Korean Review Vol. 5, No. 2; Fall 2009: p.21 - 33 |
Key Words | Foreign Policy ; Self Reliance ; Supreme Leader ; Confucian Culture ; Weapons of Mass Destruction ; WMD |