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CONNOLLY, DANIEL (4) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   173405


Human Security Implications of the Fourth Industrial Revolution in East Asia / Soh, Changrok ; Connolly, Daniel   Journal Article
Connolly, Daniel Journal Article
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2
ID:   169392


Learning to Share? A Cold War Solution for Denuclearizing the Korean Peninsula / Connolly, Daniel ; Hynd, Alexander M   Journal Article
Daniel Connolly and Alexander M. Hynd Journal Article
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3
ID:   186609


Unwanted participation? Defector public diplomacy in South Korea / Connolly, Daniel   Journal Article
Connolly, Daniel Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract The controversy surrounding defector balloon launches into North Korea is often viewed as a bizarre example of Cold War legacies on the Korean peninsula. However, it is also a unique case study of non-state public diplomacy because these groups are attempting to engage in cross-border communication against the wishes of their host government. This article argues that South Korea’s unique interpretation of public diplomacy as a participatory activity has proven vulnerable to non-state organisations with divergent views of the national interest, which has resulted in two different types of public diplomacy being directed at North Korea. Subsequent attempts by the South Korean government to control the dissonant public diplomacy of non-state groups resulted in reputational costs for both sides and ultimately failed to prevent defectors from advancing their claim to a human right to communicate across national borders. Even though this case study broadly supports a polylateral interpretation of public diplomacy, it cautions that human rights discourses may obscure the fact that the traditional diplomatic system was designed to mitigate many of the risks associated with non-state diplomatic actors. Therefore, this paper suggests the need for more discussion about the consequences of a right to communicate across national borders.
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4
ID:   179267


Why Are Developed Countries Giving Aid to India?: Determinants of Aid to India, 1960 to 2015 / Kim, Youngwan ; Connolly, Daniel   Journal Article
Kim, Youngwan Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract India is the recipient of substantial aid flows but also a nuclear-armed power and an emerging donor. Why have developed countries provided aid to one of the fastest-growing major economies in the world? Answering this question requires understanding the underlying determinants of these aid flows. Using data from 1960 to 2015, the domestic conditions of India and the external conditions of donors are empirically explored with time-series analysis and panel-data analysis. We find that during the Cold War India received more foreign aid from donors with a larger volume of trade and arms transfers, but from 2000 to 2015 the effect of arms transfers declined while countries with high trade volumes continued to give more aid. Although these findings broadly support the realist interpretation of aid, we conclude that post–Cold War structural shifts in the international aid regime and defense industries need to be considered by future researchers.
Key Words Trade  Arms Transfer  Foreign Aid  India  Ideal Point Distance 
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