ID | 163466 |
Title Proper | Elite opinion and the "Belt and Road" Debate in South Korea |
Language | ENG |
Author | Hundt, David ; Kim, Sooyoung |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | This article analyzes elite opinion in South Korea as it applies to China's One Belt, One Road initiative (OBOR), in order to better understand how a prominent Asia-Pacific middle power and US ally is approaching this development. Through a close analysis of the writing of foreign-policy elites in South Korea from 2013 to 2017, the study finds that OBOR was generally depicted as significant to China's re-emergence in regional and global affairs, but not as wholly detrimental to South Korean interests. Elites did not speak with one voice, but presented the government with a comparatively sanguine view of OBOR. The debate, we illustrate, created unlikely alliances between left- and right-leaning elites about some aspects of the initiative, but it also revealed tensions among conservative and centrist elites. In seeking to demonstrate their relevance to policy makers, however, elites inadvertently underlined their growing distance from the general public. |
`In' analytical Note | Pacific Affairs Vol. 92, 1, Mar-2019; p27-48 |
Journal Source | Pacific Affairs Vol: 92 No 1 |
Key Words | China ; South Korea ; Elite Opinion ; Foreign Policy ; One Belt One Road (OBOR) |