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Israel and Judah in the perspective of Korean reunificationPark, Sung Jin January 1995 (has links)
No description available.
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Finding brotherhood : black and white on the front lines of Korea and VietnamMaxwell, Jeremy Patrick James William January 2016 (has links)
"Finding Brotherhood" provides an analysis of issues concerning race during the period of integration in the Korean War, against the backdrop of the Civil Rights Movement during the Vietnam War. The American perception of civil-military relations during this time period is also addressed, with respect to the ideas of citizenship and service. More specifically, J show how experience in combat units brought African Americans and white soldiers together in a time great social unrest, and the opposite experience that characterized service in rear units.
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Historical blocs, organic crises, and inter-Korean relationsChoi, Yong Sub January 2016 (has links)
Applying a Gramscian approach, this thesis explores the relationship between hegemonic struggles in South and North Korea and the inter-Korean reconciliation from 1998 to 2002 and it argues that the reconciliation was pursued as hegemonic projects by the ruling political groups of the two Koreas. In South Korea, the 1997 economic crisis was an organic crisis that Chaebol-friendly exportist Fordism in the early stages of neoliberalisation yielded. The crisis caused counter-hegemonic liberal nationalists to attain political power. The new North Korean policy was a ‘national-popular’ programme that pursued nationalism, a counterforce to anti-Communism with which the hegemonic group exercised ideological leadership. Seoul’s rhetoric was to enhance peace on the peninsula but, in reality, the reconciliation process was undertaken at the price of tolerating the North’s armed provocations and nuclear and missile development. The ruling political group clung to repairing inter-Korean relations because it was a project to obtain hegemony from the hands of the hegemonic group. In the case of North Korea, the new South Korean policy had a ‘national-popular’ outlook of nationalism but, in practice, it aimed to obtain economic benefits to preserve hegemony. The economic crisis in the 1990s was an organic crisis resulted from Pyongyang's autarkist Soviet Fordism that excessively subordinated the economy to politics and thus worsened the shortcomings of the socialist system. The crisis brought about unparalleled damage to the existing system and, most of all, severely debilitated the state’s tight grip on society. In particular, it undermined the Party's activities that indoctrinated North Koreans with the Juche Ideology that legitimized the dictatorship and made hegemonic rule possible. Weathering the crisis without a full-scale reform of the system was vital to maintaining hegemony, and thus Pyongyang urgently needed economic help from Seoul.
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