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ID052314
Title ProperAlternatives to peacekeeping in Korea: the role of non-state actors and face-to-face encounters
LanguageENG
AuthorBleiker, Roland
PublicationSpring 2004.
Summary / Abstract (Note)Korea is one of the world's most volatile areas, not least because traditional UN mediation and peacekeeping missions are impossible. Having intervened in the Korean War on behalf of the southern side, the UN is a party to the conflict, rather than a neutral arbiter. The situation is particularly problematic because political interactions are characterized by a high degree of state-control over security policy. In both parts of the peninsula the state has, at least until recently, exercised the exclusive right to deal with the opponent on the other side of the hermetically divided peninsula. Given these domestic and international constrains, alternative approaches to conflict resolution are urgently needed. The recently proliferating literature on human security offers possible solutions, for it urges policy makers to view security beyond the conventional military-based defence of the state and its territory. Using such a conceptual framework, the essay assesses the potential significance non-state interactions between North and South, particularly those that promote communication, information exchange and face-to-face encounters. Even though these interactions remain limited, they are of crucial importance, for they provide an opportunity to reduce the stereotypical threat images that continue to fuel conflict on the peninsula.
`In' analytical NoteInternational Peacekeeping Vol. 11, No.1; Spring 2004: p143-159
Journal SourceInternational Peacekeeping 2004-03 11, 1
Key WordsInternational Intervention ;  Korea ;  Peacekeeping Operations ;  United Nations