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Between Global and National Priorities: The North Korean Crisis and the Regional Security Order in East Asia |
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Abstract:
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After North Korea conducted what appeared to be a sub-kiloton nuclear test in October 2006, some politicians and pundits were quick to point out that China's limited pressure on North Korea, coupled with South Korea's continued support for the North Korean regime, have sustained and emboldened the outlaw regime. Implicit in this view is the assumption that North Korea's neighbors have different, idiosyncratic national priorities vis-a-vis North Korea, making a joint resolution very difficult to achieve. The image of the East Asian countries "nationalizing" the North Korean issue to the detriment of global security, however, misses the extent to which the North Korean challenge has been reshaping the broader regional security landscape in East Asia. Rather than a venue for defusing the nuclear crisis, the Six Party Talks have become a site of competing logics between the U.S. framing of the North Korean question as a clear-cut global challenge and the East Asian view of it as a complex regional problem whose solution would have repercussions for the regional security order in East Asia. This paper investigates how the North Korean challenge, viewed through the lenses of the regional strategies of the three East Asian countries, has affected the existing regional security order, in particular with respect to alliance politics and security regionalism in the wake of the second North Korean nuclear crisis. |
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korea (170), north (153), region (141), japan (134), korean (125), south (81), u.s (77), china (73), east (61), secur (61), state (58), asian (58), asia (54), p (51), unit (51), allianc (49), new (48), bush (47), peninsula (40), chines (36), 2005 (36), |
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Association:
Name: ISA's 49th ANNUAL CONVENTION, BRIDGING MULTIPLE DIVIDES URL: http://www.isanet.org
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Citation:
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MLA Citation:
| Cho, Il Hyun. "Between Global and National Priorities: The North Korean Crisis and the Regional Security Order in East Asia" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the ISA's 49th ANNUAL CONVENTION, BRIDGING MULTIPLE DIVIDES, Hilton San Francisco, SAN FRANCISCO, CA, USA, Mar 26, 2008 <Not Available>. 2009-05-23 <http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p252872_index.html> |
APA Citation:
| Cho, I. , 2008-03-26 "Between Global and National Priorities: The North Korean Crisis and the Regional Security Order in East Asia" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the ISA's 49th ANNUAL CONVENTION, BRIDGING MULTIPLE DIVIDES, Hilton San Francisco, SAN FRANCISCO, CA, USA Online <APPLICATION/PDF>. 2009-05-23 from http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p252872_index.html |
Publication Type: Conference Paper/Unpublished Manuscript Abstract: After North Korea conducted what appeared to be a sub-kiloton nuclear test in October 2006, some politicians and pundits were quick to point out that China's limited pressure on North Korea, coupled with South Korea's continued support for the North Korean regime, have sustained and emboldened the outlaw regime. Implicit in this view is the assumption that North Korea's neighbors have different, idiosyncratic national priorities vis-a-vis North Korea, making a joint resolution very difficult to achieve. The image of the East Asian countries "nationalizing" the North Korean issue to the detriment of global security, however, misses the extent to which the North Korean challenge has been reshaping the broader regional security landscape in East Asia. Rather than a venue for defusing the nuclear crisis, the Six Party Talks have become a site of competing logics between the U.S. framing of the North Korean question as a clear-cut global challenge and the East Asian view of it as a complex regional problem whose solution would have repercussions for the regional security order in East Asia. This paper investigates how the North Korean challenge, viewed through the lenses of the regional strategies of the three East Asian countries, has affected the existing regional security order, in particular with respect to alliance politics and security regionalism in the wake of the second North Korean nuclear crisis. |
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application/pdf |
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31 |
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9831 |
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| Between Global and National Priorities: The North Korean Crisis and the Regional Security Order in East Asia Il Hyun Cho Ph.D. Candidate Department of Government Cornell University ic44@cornell.edu Exchange Scholar Department of Political Science Stanford University icho1@stanford.edu Draft: Please do not cite or quote without permission Comments welcome Prepared for delivery at the International Studies Association Annual Convention March 26-29 2008 San Francisco CA Between Global and National Priorities: The North Korean Crisis and the Regional Security Order in |
| the North Korea situation all the more difficult to resolve while unnecessarily cornering North Korea into producing the very outcomes the Six Party talks were designed to prevent: a continuation of the nuclear crisis and the first nuclear test in the post-9/11 context. More importantly in the process the Bush administration has not only stalled regional efforts to forge a broader regional security mechanism but also ushered in a new era of a more exclusive and conflictual regional order |
Similar Titles:
Is a pluralistic security community developing Northeast Asia? A case study on peaceful behavioral change between China, South Korea and Japan: From 1990 to 2005.
Inter-regional Asian Emigration and the Potential for International Cooperation in East Asia: A Comparative Examination of State Integration Policies in Korea and Japan
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