|
|
|
|
International Environments, State Identity, and South Korea's National Security: Focusing on the Sunshine Policy (1998 - 2003) |
|
| Abstract | Word Stems | Keywords | Association | Citation | Get this Document | Similar Titles |
|
STOP! You can now view the document associated with this citation by clicking on the "View Document as HTML" link below. |
|
Click here to view the document
|
Abstract:
|
Using a comparative approach to South Korea’s engagement policy toward North Korea (the so-called Sunshine policy) in relation to changes in South Korea’s international environments focusing on U.S. security policies and practices toward the Korean peninsula, this paper aims to examine the ways in which international environments shaped South Korea’s state identity, national interests, and the implementation of the Sunshine policy during the Kim Dae-jung administration from 1998 to 2003. In particular, concentrating on the effects that external environments and state identity had on South Korea’s national security, the paper will address the question of how the ideas held by South Korea related to the ideas that made up the regional security culture. In doing so, it also illustrates conventional constructivist arguments on state identity and national interests in the context of South Korea, what Rationalism ignores in International Relations (IR).
Here, this paper mainly presents four sets of arguments: two analytical and two theoretical. The first analytical argument is that although the South Korean-U.S. collective actions that have addressed the North Korean problem have begun to erode their alliance identity against North Korea and have encouraged latent Korean nationalism embracing North Korea, in South Korea there was a delicate and stable balance between those two seemingly conflicting identities during the Clinton administration. The second analytical argument is that, due largely to a change in international environments that began with the Bush administration in 2001, South Korea’s state identity became deeply contested between 1) the alliance security bond with the U.S. and 2) the nationalist bond with North Korea, and this tension with changed external environments made South Korea difficult to neatly define national interests and also made the Sunshine policy seem to be untenable during the Bush administration’s first term.
The first theoretical argument is that, in conducting substantive empirical research based on constructivism, it needs to focus on not what exactly states’ environments (or norms) might regulate and constitute interests and identities of states but how we might explain the political phenomena or events widely identified as evidence of cultural or institutional environments’ (or norms’) effects. In fact, differentiating constitutive effects from regulative effects of environments (norms) is a vexing (if not, unnecessary) task, because they often generate both effects at the same time. The second theoretical argument is that conventional constructivism can only capture half of state’s identity formation, owing to its strong structuralist tilt to focusing solely on ‘collective identity’ among states in a given social system. It is thus required that, as Alexander Wendt calls, ‘corporate identity’ black box should be opened to make better sense of the formation and diffusion of South Korea’s state identity relating to national security, interests, and the Sunshine policy. |
Most Common Document Word Stems:
north (255), korea (255), south (232), u.s (215), korean (211), polici (126), administr (118), state (110), bush (97), kim (93), ident (82), relat (74), secur (73), nation (63), sunshin (62), clinton (60), 2003 (59), war (51), 2004 (50), first (49), interest (44), |
|
|
 | Convention | | All Academic Convention is the premier solution for your association's abstract management solutions needs. |  | Submission - Custom fields, multiple submission types, tracks, audio visual, multiple upload formats, automatic conversion to pdf. |  | Review - Peer Review, Bulk reviewer assignment, bulk emails, ranking, z-score statistics, and multiple worksheets! |  | Reports - Many standard and custom reports generated while you wait. Print programs with participant indexes, event grids, and more! |  | Scheduling - Flexible and convenient grid scheduling within rooms and buildings. Conflict checking and advanced filtering. |  | Communication - Bulk email tools to help your administrators send reminders and responses. Use form letters, a message center, and much more! |  | Management - Search tools, duplicate people management, editing tools, submission transfers, many tools to manage a variety of conference management headaches! | | Click here for more information. |
|
|
Association:
Name: International Studies Association 48th Annual Convention URL: http://www.isanet.org
|
Citation:
|
MLA Citation:
| Cho, Young-Chul. "International Environments, State Identity, and South Korea's National Security: Focusing on the Sunshine Policy (1998 - 2003)" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the International Studies Association 48th Annual Convention, Hilton Chicago, CHICAGO, IL, USA, Feb 28, 2007 <Not Available>. 2009-05-24 <http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p179653_index.html> |
APA Citation:
| Cho, Y. , 2007-02-28 "International Environments, State Identity, and South Korea's National Security: Focusing on the Sunshine Policy (1998 - 2003)" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the International Studies Association 48th Annual Convention, Hilton Chicago, CHICAGO, IL, USA Online <PDF>. 2009-05-24 from http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p179653_index.html |
Publication Type: Conference Paper/Unpublished Manuscript Abstract: Using a comparative approach to South Korea’s engagement policy toward North Korea (the so-called Sunshine policy) in relation to changes in South Korea’s international environments focusing on U.S. security policies and practices toward the Korean peninsula, this paper aims to examine the ways in which international environments shaped South Korea’s state identity, national interests, and the implementation of the Sunshine policy during the Kim Dae-jung administration from 1998 to 2003. In particular, concentrating on the effects that external environments and state identity had on South Korea’s national security, the paper will address the question of how the ideas held by South Korea related to the ideas that made up the regional security culture. In doing so, it also illustrates conventional constructivist arguments on state identity and national interests in the context of South Korea, what Rationalism ignores in International Relations (IR).
Here, this paper mainly presents four sets of arguments: two analytical and two theoretical. The first analytical argument is that although the South Korean-U.S. collective actions that have addressed the North Korean problem have begun to erode their alliance identity against North Korea and have encouraged latent Korean nationalism embracing North Korea, in South Korea there was a delicate and stable balance between those two seemingly conflicting identities during the Clinton administration. The second analytical argument is that, due largely to a change in international environments that began with the Bush administration in 2001, South Korea’s state identity became deeply contested between 1) the alliance security bond with the U.S. and 2) the nationalist bond with North Korea, and this tension with changed external environments made South Korea difficult to neatly define national interests and also made the Sunshine policy seem to be untenable during the Bush administration’s first term.
The first theoretical argument is that, in conducting substantive empirical research based on constructivism, it needs to focus on not what exactly states’ environments (or norms) might regulate and constitute interests and identities of states but how we might explain the political phenomena or events widely identified as evidence of cultural or institutional environments’ (or norms’) effects. In fact, differentiating constitutive effects from regulative effects of environments (norms) is a vexing (if not, unnecessary) task, because they often generate both effects at the same time. The second theoretical argument is that conventional constructivism can only capture half of state’s identity formation, owing to its strong structuralist tilt to focusing solely on ‘collective identity’ among states in a given social system. It is thus required that, as Alexander Wendt calls, ‘corporate identity’ black box should be opened to make better sense of the formation and diffusion of South Korea’s state identity relating to national security, interests, and the Sunshine policy. |
Get this Document:
Find this citation or document at one or all of these locations below. The links below may have the citation or the entire document for free or you may purchase access to the document. Clicking on these links will change the site you're on and empty your shopping cart.
| Document Type: |
PDF |
| Page count: |
38 |
| Word count: |
17053 |
| Text sample: |
| International Environments State Identity and South Korea’s National Security: Focusing on the Sunshine Policy (1998 - 2003) By Young-Chul Cho PhD Candidate Government & International Politics University of Manchester U.K. E-mail: youngchul.cho@gmail.com 2 March 2007 This paper is prepared for presentation at the 48th ISA Annual Convention in Chicago USA 28 February - 3 March 2007 Working Paper – Please Do Not Quote without Permission International Environments State Identity and South Korea’s National Security: Focusing on the Sunshine Policy |
| Security Strategy for a New Century Washington D.C.: The White House. WH (The White House The United States of America) (2003) National Strategy for Combating Terrorism Washington D.C.: The White House. Woo-Cumings Meredith (2005) ‘Unilateralism and Its Discontents: The Passing of the Cold War Alliance and Changing Public Opinion in the Republic of Korea’ in David I. Steinberg (ed) Korean Attitudes toward the United States: Changing Dynamics p. 56-79. Armonk: M.E.Sharpe. 37 Yang Young-shik (1998) ‘Kim Dae-jung Administration’s North |
Similar Titles:
Interest and Identity in Foreign Policy: China in the Six-Party Talks on North Korean Nuclear Issue
“Lips and Teeth” or “Boot on Bottom?” – China-North Korea Relations and China’s Interests In the North Korean Nuclear Dilemma
|
|