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ID175867
Title ProperGreen Paradox
LanguageENG
AuthorPark, Jeongwon Bourdais ;  JeongWon Bourdais Park and Jacklin Suji Lee ;  Lee, Jacklin Suji
Summary / Abstract (Note)Article Type: Research Paper Purpose— This article examines the mechanism of major IGOs' (inter-governmental environmental organizations) assistance and cooperation for the purpose of improving ecological conditions in North Korea (DRPK: Democratic People's Republic of Korea). Design, Methodology, Approach— This research delves into how certain IGOs have cooperated with North Korea in select environmental fields. It particularly investigates the relevant activities of prominent organizations that have been engaged in North Korea's environment-related issues. Findings— Contrary to the views of neo-functional green détentes or the hopeful outlooks of ecologists, and at odds with the general expectation for neutrality from IGOs, this article argues that immediate and prioritized material interests of North Korea as well as IGOs' financial constraints cause only intermittent attention, and yet the consequences of such temporality and discontinuity resulted in some positive ecological initiatives. However, they have also largely marginalized sustained environmental management in the country. Practical Implications— Inter-Korean relations and U.S. policies influence IGO engagement, and when the political conditions are favorable, environmental cooperation with the DPRK increases, but it easily wanes when one of those elements, particularly the ROK's policy toward the DPRK, changes. Originality, Value— Among international relations and political scientists, studies on contemporary North Korea are concentrated mainly in the field of denuclearization, DPRK–U.S. relations, and more recently, political economy linking marketization and development. Scholarly work on emerging environmental cooperation surrounding North Korea remains scarce.
`In' analytical NoteNorth Korean Review Vol. 16, No.2; Fall 2020: p.49-74
Journal SourceNorth Korean Review 2020-12 16, 2
Key WordsGreen Paradox ;  DRPK