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ID130550
Title ProperImmunity to resistance
Other Title Informationstate-society relations and political stability in North Korea in a comparative perspective
LanguageENG
AuthorSzalontai, Balázs ;  Choi, Changyong
Publication2014.
Summary / Abstract (Note)Purpose-This article investigates whether certain social and subnational groups that have shown resistance against other one-party states might play a similar role in North Korea.
Design/methodology/approach-Comparing the DPRK with various Communist regimes and Baathist party-states in Syria and Iraq, this article examines the following social groups as potential factors of resistance: industrial workers, private entrepreneurs, and religious, ethnic and regional identities.
Findings-Resistance has not been wholly absent in North Korean, but the disaffected social groups have lacked sufficient bargaining power, while the state has occasionally refrained from steps that triggered protests in other countries.
Practical implications-By comparing the DPRK with various types of regimes (pre-reform Communist systems, partially market-oriented Communist systems, and Baathist party-states), the article also seeks to investigate whether the dynamics of North Korean society is largely unique, or if it can be at least partially explained by means of analogy.
`In' analytical NoteNorth Korean Review Vol.10, No.1; Spring 2014: p.55-70
Journal SourceNorth Korean Review Vol.10, No.1; Spring 2014: p.55-70
Key WordsNational Identities ;  Collective Identities ;  Entrepreneurs ;  Protests ;  North Korea ;  State-Society Relations ;  Workers ;  Political Stability ;  Economic Development ;  Communist Regimes ;  DPRK ;  Analogy