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         North Korea History Regional:     more detail
  1. Human Remolding in North Korea: A Social History of Education.(Book review) : An article from: Pacific Affairs by Roland Bleiker, 2005-12-22
  2. Great Leader, Dear Leader: Demystifying North Korea Under The Kim Clan.(Book review): An article from: Journal of Contemporary Asia by Taejoon Han, 2006-08-01
  3. The Future of North Korea by Tsuneo Akaha, 2007-03-20
  4. Going Critical: The First North Korea Nuclear Crisis.(Book Review): An article from: Journal of Contemporary Asia by Geoffrey C. Gunn, 2005-08-01
  5. North Korea (Modern World Nations) by Christopher L. Salter, 2007-10-30
  6. The Future of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea.: An article from: Journal of Contemporary Asia by Phillip Park, 2001-03-01

21. World Press Review - North Korea - Nuclear Program
north korean offer suggests a repeat of history. Any agreement must center around north korea “fully, irreversibly the credible threat of regional deterrence.
http://www.worldpress.org/Asia/1768.cfm
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Asia
Clearing the Nuclear Fog over North Korea
David Scofield
World Press Review correspondent
Seoul, South Korea Jan. 22, 2004 North Korea's Yongbyon nuclear reactor from a satellite photo (Photo: Space Imaging/AFP-Getty Images). The Jan. 8 “unofficial” U.S. visit to the empty holding ponds at the restarted Yongbyon nuclear site, a strangely obvious facility for a country that maintains a most of its strategic assets deep underground, yielded little to sway opinion. For those who believe in the possibility of reconciliation and negotiation with the North Korean leadership, the Yongbyon facility represents tangibility and verifiability. For the rest, it symbolizes contradiction: a facade designed to obfuscate and divide. But while Yongbyon is a fog, the words of North Korean Deputy Foreign Minister Kim Gye-gwan are more illuminating. Charles “Jack” Pritchard, a former U.S. State Department official and a member of the U.S. team, told reporters that Kim had warned him that “time is not on the U.S. side.” Kim may well be right: There is a strong case to be made that time is the United States’ fatal weakness in its dealings with North Korea. All things being equal, dictators have an advantage when dealing with democracies. The North Korean leadership is not bound by the same time constraints, checks and balances, and rules that bind elected officials. There are no elections to be fought, no competing interests to reconcile. This offers an obvious incentive for North Korea to drag things along, ideally through the next elections and toward a potentially more pliant adversary.

22. Seoul History | Lonely Planet World Guide
Freshness near the sight of north korea s capital, Pyongyang began to figure in korean history, though it the Silla, and Seoul lost its regional pre-eminence
http://www.lonelyplanet.com/destinations/north_east_asia/seoul/history.htm
home search help worldguide ... Postcards
Seoul
History
Neolithic sites discovered around Seoul point to human habitation as long ago as 4000 BC. The first official records relating to Korea are Chinese and date from the 1st century BC. At this time, a renegade general fled from China, and played a part in setting up a kingdom called Goguryeo - or 'Morning Freshness' - near the sight of North Korea's capital, Pyongyang. The kingdom, quickly overpowered by the Chinese, allowed Chinese influence to infuse the rest of the peninsula. Until 668 AD - the Three Kingdoms Period - the peninsula was ruled from three centres. During this period, the region of modern Seoul began to figure in Korean history, though it would be a long time before it would be known by its modern name. The Baekje kingdom established its capital city at Wiryesong, now Songnam, on the outskirts of contemporary Seoul. For some time the area was dominated by another kingdom, the Silla, and Seoul lost its regional pre-eminence. By 918 a soldier from the northern Goguryeo kingdom assumed control of the whole region, founding the Goryeo kingdom, from which Korea takes its name. Even when the Mongols invaded in 1231 the Goryeo kingdom maintained its control, though the decline of the Mongols was matched by that of the Goryeo. In 1392 a Korean general, Yi Songgye, sent to campaign against the Ming Chinese, threw his hand in with the enemy, turned back and overthrew the Korean king. Two years later he moved the capital to Hanyang-gun which became known as Seoul, the native Korean word for 'capital'. By 1404 the population had reached 100,000. Confucianism was preferred over Buddhism, and for almost 500 years Buddhist monks were banned from entering Seoul.

23. SPECIAL REPORT: The Challenge Of North Korea
analysts of East Asia argue that the challenges posed by north korea cannot be surmounted without addressing the role of history in shaping regional politics.
http://www.cceia.org/viewMedia.php/prmTemplateID/8/prmID/927
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03/21/2003 Special Report SPECIAL REPORT: War with Iraq Nautilus Institute Forum: Bush Administration Policy on North Korea Ministry of Foreign Affairs Special Report: Japan-North Korea Relations BBC Country Profile: North Korea ... AsiaSource.org Special Report: "North Korea Admits It Has Nuclear Weapons"
This special report presents a collection of statements on the ethical aspects of the foreign policy challenges presented by North Korea, with links to full-length texts where available. The statements were made by leading thinkers in Japan-Korea area studies and/or international affairs, all of whom have appeared recently at Carnegie Council events or contributed to our publications. The excerpted passages are clustered beneath the following areas:
  • Rules of engaging states that defy international law
  • North Korea-Japan reconciliation as a pre-condition for security 1) Rules of engaging states that defy international law
    President Bush set his policy toward North Korea in his 1/29/02 State of the Union Address
    North Korea is a regime arming with missiles and weapons of mass destruction, while starving its citizens. . . . States like these [North Korea, Iran, and Iraq], and their terrorist allies, constitute an axis of evil, arming to threaten the peace of the world. By seeking weapons of mass destruction, these regimes pose a grave and growing danger. They could provide these arms to terrorists, giving them the means to match their hatred. They could attack our allies or attempt to blackmail the United States. In any of these cases, the price of indifference would be catastrophic.
  • 24. ZapMeta Directory > Regional > Asia > North Korea
    . north korea Official Webpage open this site in a new window Past Versions Information about history, society, culture, folk and unification.
    http://www.zapmeta.com/search/meta/db.pl?dir=125962

    25. Meanwhile, In North Korea
    GNN is committed to recovering our hidden history, lost during started testing missiles, but Bush simply dismissed north korea as a regional problem. But
    http://hnn.us/articles/1316.html
    donations archives newsletter contact ... FAQ''s June 10, 2004 Text Size: A A A Departments
    Breaking News
    Features HNN Blogs Hot Topics ...
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    3-17-03: News Abroad Meanwhile, in North Korea
    By Ruth Rosen
    Ms. Rosen is a columnist for the San Francisco Chronicle and former Professor of History at the University of California Davis. Host: Good evening. This is GNN, Global News Network, with another edition of "Interview with History." GNN is committed to recovering our hidden history, lost during the Dark Decades. Tonight, our guests are retired Army Gen. Samuel Spears, who served two tours of duty in Persian Gulf War II and commanded the U.S. forces in Korean War II. He answers questions from his grandson, Adam Spears, a senior at Lowell High School. Adam, why don't you begin? Adam: Well, we're studying the causes of the second Korean War and I just don't get it. Gen. Spears: As I've explained before, Adam, President George W. Bush was obsessed with Saddam Hussein, not to mention with Iraq's oil reserves. He managed to convince most Americans that Iraq was responsible for the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on New York City and Washington. So, people just weren't paying much attention to the North Korean threat. Adam: But didn't anyone notice what was going on in North Korea?

    26. North Korea MiPAL
    03 Text north korean Officials have Long history in Crime 12 March 03 regional Implications of Asian Support for US Proposal on north korea Press Briefing
    http://merln.ndu.edu/mipal/nkorea.html
    North Korea
    Military Policy Awareness Links
    A MERLN MiPAL

    Compiled By The
    National Defense University Library
    MiPAL
    Visit the MiPAL Home Page
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    Search This MIPAL This search is of the full-text of the documents in this MiPAL. MIPAL to Search Afghanistan Homeland Security India Iran Iraq North Korea National Security Strategy Pakistan Syria Terrorism Transformation Weapons of Mass Destruction Type a word or phrase and click "Search" Recently Added Documents This section contains selected documents that have been added to this MiPAL in the past 30 days. All recently included items can also be found by subject division below.

    27. Wauu.DE: Regional: Asia: North Korea
    countries/north_korea/. north korea Official Webpage Information about history, society, culture, folk and unification. http//www.koreadpr.com. north korean
    http://www.wauu.de/Regional/Asia/North_Korea/
    Home Regional Asia : North Korea Search DMOZ-Verzeichnis:
    All Categories Categories Onlye
    Kategorien:
    Arts and Entertainment Business and Economy Education Government ... Weather
    Links:
    • About North Korea
      Complete resource on N.Korea with information on its culture, art, business, news, travel, and history.
      http://www.asianinfo.org/asianinfo/north%20korea/north_korea.htm
    • Asiaco North Korea
      Includes news, business, travel, jobs, and health information about North Korea.
      http://NorthKorea.asiaco.com/
    • DPR Korea Trade
      A DPRK Trade Website: Commercial Website of DPRK (North Korea) for introducing new inventions, technologies and products of the DPR. of Korea.
      http://www.dprkorea-trade.com/
    • North Korea Contains statistical data and links to news, travel, weather, and government. http://www.countries.com/countries/north_korea/
    • North Korea Official Webpage Information about history, society, culture, folk and unification. http://www.korea-dpr.com
    • North Korean Studies The site is focused on North Korea (DPRK), its relations with Russia and the other CIS republics. Also available materials about Soviet Koreans and North Korean refugees in China. http://north-korea.narod.ru

    28. CNN In-Depth Specials - Visions Of China - Asian Superpower: Regional 'godfather
    the side of Communist ally north korea against an Warren Cohen, professor of history at the University Baltimore County, says Beijing s regional policies are
    http://www.cnn.com/SPECIALS/1999/china.50/asian.superpower/neighbors/
    [an error occurred while processing this directive] China's middle class
    Three Gorges Dam

    Regional bully or godfather?
    U.S.-China: A delicate balance

    Map: Regional relations

    China's military: A sampling

    Opinion: View from Taipei
    Regional 'godfather' or local bully?
    Protesters set sail from Hong Kong in May 1997 for the islands known as Diaoyu in China and Senkaku in Japan
    A look at China's relations with its neighbors
    By Bruce Kennedy
    CNN Interactive (CNN) China's policies concerning its regional neighbors appear, at first, to be quite idiosyncratic. One year after its founding in 1949, the People's Republic entered a war on the side of Communist ally North Korea against an anti-Communist United Nations force. Three decades later Chinese troops clashed with forces from Communist Vietnam in a brief war that combined a border dispute with ideological issues. ALSO: Map: China and its neighbors POLL:
    Should China's neighbors consider Beijing a:
    friend rival neither View Results In recent years China has quarreled with Japan over who controls a desolate group of islands 112 miles northeast of Taiwan. The islands, which the Chinese call Diaoyu and the Japanese call Senkaku, are known historically as productive fisheries, but the area also may contain oil and gas reserves.

    29. KoreaTimes : [Another Korea] (35) His Story Or History?
    Later, contrary to north korean history, even this regional Pak Chongae, the most prominent north korean female not particularly well known in korea at that
    http://times.hankooki.com/lpage/special/200401/kt2004012716371327130.htm
    Hankooki.com Korea Times Special
    [Another Korea] (35) His Story or History?
    By Andrei Lankov Indeed, Kim Il Sung, his family, and his entourage have had to work hard in re-writing the history of the North Korean state and obliterating references to the people who, once upon a time, were politically at least as important as Kim Il Sung. These people got caught in the cutthroat world of North Korean politics where the defeated are normally deprived not only of power, but also of life and their place in the history books. Kim Il sung, then an officer in the Red Army, arrived in the North in late September 1945 aboard the Soviet SS Pugachev. By the time he joind the Korean Communist Party, allegedly founded by the Great Leader, the party had been in existence for almost a month! In mid-August 1945, immediately after Korea¡¯s liberation, the Communist party was re-established in Seoul. The party was headed by Pak Hon-yong, a veteran of the Korean Communist movement who was active in the Communist underground from the mid-1920s. A charismatic leader, Pak had spent years in colonial prisons, but by 1945,had been universally recognized as the leader of the Communist movement in Korea. The Seoul headquarters of the Communist Party was considered a nationwide body: according to the established Communist tradition there could be only one Communist party in one country, and Korea was seen as one country. However, the situations in the Soviet-controlled North and the U.S.-controlled South were drastically different, and this made the establishment of an autonomous northern headquarters necessary. Thus, on Oct. 13, in Pyongyang, the North Korean Bureau of the Communist Party of Korea was established. The Bureau was technically subordinate to Pak Hon-yong¡¯s Central Committee in Seoul. The Bureau¡¯s mission was to co-ordinate communist activities in the regions that were under Soviet control. Its dependent status was emphasized in a telegram sent to Seoul expressing ¡°support for the correct political line of comrade Pak Hon-yong.¡±

    30. The North Korean Nuclear Crisis: An Annotated List Of Internet Resources
    by the Cold War International history Project on Tensions with north korea, Coverage of the communist nation s Threats to regional Security in Southeast Asia,
    http://newton.uor.edu/Departments&Programs/AsianStudiesDept/nkorea-nuke.html
    The North Korean Nuclear Crisis See also the pages on North Korea's military foreign relations Annals of National Security: The Cold Test Seymour M. Hersh's essay on "What the Administration knew about Pakistan and the North Korean nuclear program" for The New Yorker (Jan. 27, 2003) Atomic Shakedown Editorial by Nicholas Eberstadt of the American Enterprise Institute ( TIME Asia , Jan. 19, 2004) Bush Administration Demands Higher Standard for North Korea than for Itself Edited transcript of a talk given by Mark Caprio of Rikkyo University at UCLA Asia Institute (Feb. 14, 2003) Bush's Bipolar Disorder and the Looming Failure of Multilateral Talks With North Korea Essay by Peter Hayes in Arms Control Association's Arms Control Today (October 2003) Bush's North Korea Policy Still a Shambles Analysis by Aidan Foster-Carter of Leeds University ( Asia Times , Nov 26, 2003)

    31. Online NewsHour -- North Korea: Nuclear Standoff
    Early history The name korea originates from the Koryo dynasty the end of the Choson dynasty, korea struggled to defend itself from regional powers Japan and
    http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/asia/northkorea/timeline.html
    Early History
    The name Korea originates from the Koryo dynasty, one of the oldest known kingdoms to rule the peninsula from the 10th to the 14th century AD. The Koryo dynasty was succeeded by the Choson dynasty around the 14th century. The word "Choson," which translates to "Land of the Morning Calm," comes the legend of the god-like warrior, Tangun, who is said to have founded Korea around 2000 BC. Towards the end of the Choson dynasty, Korea struggled to defend itself from regional powers Japan and Russia, and Western nations, including the U.S., France and the United Kingdom. Korea, unlike many other East Asian countries, effectively repelled the West's aggressive attempts to establish commercial trade relations through the use of military force, a policy now termed "gunboat diplomacy." U.S. and European traders abandoned their hopes for foreign trade with Korea after the destruction of the armed merchant ship, the U.S.S. General Sherman, in the Taedong River near Pyongyang on Sept. 2, 1866.

    32. Asia Times
    Moscow, with which he had a history of difficult no longer a geopolitical threat (see north korea Such a 3). However, the real threat to regional stability is
    http://www.atimes.com/atimes/China/EA14Ad01.html
    China
    History awaits China's Korea move
    By Francesco Sisci
    BEIJING - In 1950 Mao Zedong made a historic decision for his country and for the world. He decided that it was more important to fight the Americans in Korea than trying to recover Taiwan, held by runaway Kuomintang (KMT) troops. This decision and the direct clash between US and Chinese troops in Korea started the Cold War. For decades many Chinese were puzzled by the decision: Why defend North Korea, a foreign country, and not fulfill the patriotic goal of reunifying the country by taking over Taiwan?
    There were many reasons for the decision. There was the technical difficulty of a landing in Taiwan, defended by the United States. There was the issue of the geographic proximity - it was more dangerous to have the US next door, divided only by a few meters of the Yalu River, if the Americans were to beat North Korea, than to have them in Taiwan, separated from the mainland by miles of sea (see Ni Lexiong, "Why China does not need one Korea", in Heartland 1-2001

    33. Asia Times - North Korea's Case For Nuclear Weapons
    have then in effect played two regional powers against Therefore, if north korea were to become a confirmed However, as history has demonstrated, it is not
    http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Korea/EH22Dg02.html
    Search Asia Times
    Advanced Search
    Korea
    North Korea's case for nuclear weapons
    By Erich Marquardt
    On October 21, 1994, the United States and North Korea signed the US-DPRK (Democratic People's Republic of Korea) Agreed Framework, an understanding in which Pyongyang accepted a proposal to scrap its development of plutonium-based nuclear-energy facilities in exchange for normalization of ties with Washington, in addition to other benefits such as internationally funded twin light-water reactors and shipments of heavy oil. As of now, the Agreed Framework is in tatters; Pyongyang blames the death of the agreement on Washington, and Washington blames it on Pyongyang.
    But which party is more responsible for the unraveling may not be as important as the following questions: Will North Korea follow up on its nuclear rhetoric and become a nuclear-armed state? And how will other regional powers, such as the United States and Japan, react to a nuclear-armed North Korean state?
    Some analysts argue that the purpose of Pyongyang's development of nuclear arms is merely to blackmail the United States. These analysts argue that once the US offers North Korea a sizable economic package and a non-aggression pact, Pyongyang will abandon its nuclear program; in fact, according to this argument, it is not in Pyongyang's national interests to develop such weapons, as it would only further alienate neighboring countries as well as the United States. While there is certainly much truth to this line of reasoning, it cannot be overlooked that North Korea would gain international leverage should it acquire nuclear arms.

    34. Regional Approaches To Proliferation Prevention -- Northeast Asia Region -- The
    postWorld War II Europe, history has always South korea, and a declining north korea have brought reality is missile proliferation by regional powers with
    http://rapp.stanleyfoundation.org/northeast_asia.html
    @import "styles/rapp3.css";
    Regional Approaches to Proliferation Prevention
    A program of the Stanley Foundation
    The Importance of the Northeast Asia Region to Global Security and Stability
    Projects of the Northeast Asia Region
    Related Resources
    Economic, Social, Political, and Military Divisions in Northeast Asia
    The Northeast Asian security equation is further complicated by the fact that it is in this region that a rising China, a declining post-Soviet Russia, a rising South Korea, and a declining North Korea have brought about the greatest swings in power in the last half century. Meanwhile, with every country in the region (except Mongolia) both a consumer and a producer of missiles capable of carrying WMD, the dangerous and unsettling reality is missile proliferation by regional powers with uncertain domestic political futures and ambiguous bilateral relationships toward each other. The current impasse between the Bush Administration of the United States and the government of Kim Jong-Il could eventually lead to US preemptive conventional military strikes against North Korean nuclear production and storage sites, possibly leading to all-out war on the Peninsula. Bush's characterization of North Korea as a terrorist state within an "Axis of Evil," and the new US strategy of preemptive strikes and preventive war against WMD proliferation threats wherever they may occur, has raised the ideological and security stakes of the standoff on the Peninsula - in effect transforming the longstanding division of the Korean Peninsula into a global rather than regional security issue, and highlighting the economic, military, social, and political differences between North and South Korea rather than focusing on possibilities for reconciliation.

    35. Society-KOREA Korea Was One Of The Earliest Of The Present-day
    parts of the peninsula throughout history. regional economic differences have After World War II, South korea, with 43 north korea on the other hand, with 57
    http://lucy.ukc.ac.uk/EthnoAtlas/Hmar/Cult_dir/Culture.7854
    Society-KOREA "Korea was one of the earliest of the present-day nations of the world to emerge and remain clearly on the map of history. By the end of the seventh century it was essentially the same country it is today, in population, underlying culture, language, and general geographical extent" (Reischauer and Fairbank 1960: 411). The country of Korea is located in northeastern Asia on a peninsula extending some 600 miles from Manchuria into the Sea of Japan and the Yellow Sea (lat. 33 degrees 12 min.-43 degrees 2 min. N by long. 124 degrees 13 min.-130 degrees 54 min. E). Since 1948 the Korean nation has been divided into two political and geographical entities: North Korea, officially the Democratic People's Republic of Korea; and South Korea, officially the Republic of Korea, with the 38th parallel serving as the line of demarcation. The total area of Korea is 84,822 square miles, of which 38,022 square miles are in the South and 46,800 square miles are in the North. The climate throughout most of the peninsula is hot and humid in summer, cold and dry in winter. The Korean language is classified by the Voegelins within the Altaic language family although they note conflicting views on this matter. There seems to be general agreement that there are seven main dialects of Korean, and that the dialect boundaries generally correspond to the traditional provincial boundaries (Voegelin 1977: 18-19). Evidently all of these dialects are mutually intelligible except perhaps for that of Cheju Island; however, there may be sufficient divergence to cause some initial communication difficulties. As a result of long-continued Chinese influence, a large proportion of the Korean vocabulary (52 percent) consists of words borrowed from the Chinese language, while only a small percent consists of other foreign words. During the period of Japanese occupation (1910-1945), the Japanese language was introduced into the educational system-but with relatively little success. After 1945, English became a second language in the South. In 1974, the population of North Korea was estimated to be 15,510,000, while that of South Korea was estimated at 33,465,000, a combined total of 48,975,000 (Information Please Almanac 1975: 223-24). These figures indicate a much higher population density per square mile in the South than in the North (800.1 vs. 331.4). A key ecological factor is that all of Korea is mountainous, with only a fifth of the land suitable for cultivation. The best cultivable areas are the broad river valleys and wide coastal plans found along the western and southern coasts. According to Reischauer and Fairbank (1960: 400), "The greater agricultural productivity of southern and western Korea, together with their greater accessibility to China and also to Japan, has made these regions the dominant parts of the peninsula throughout history." Regional economic differences have continued into the modern period. After World War II, South Korea, with 43 percent of the land area of the peninsula and over two-thirds of its population, was predominantly agricultural, the major crops being rice, barley, sweet potatoes, and yams. North Korea on the other hand, with 57 percent of the land area but less than one-third of the population, had by far the larger part of the peninsula's industry plus ample hydroelectric resources. Since 1963, however, there has been marked industrial expansion in South Korea, including the rapid development of manufacturing, mining, transportation, and electric power. Many basic aspects of modern Korean culture and social organization are best understood if seen against the background of Korean culture history. Only the briefest outline is possible here, but a good succinct treatment is presented in Reischauer and Fairbank (1960: 394-449); while a more extensive, but highly readable, account is given in Osgood (1951: 133-346). Until the fourth century B.C., Korea was occupied by small, pre-agricultural, tribal groups migrating from northern Asia. Then, Chinese influences, which were to have a profound and continuing impact on Korean history and culture, began to penetrate the peninsula. Partly as a result of these influences, the first truly Korean state, that of Koguryo, was established in the first century B.C. Koguryo was later to see the rise of two rival states, Paekche and Silla. These states formed the famed "Three Kingdoms" of Korean history. Eventually, Silla conquered its rivals and the first political unification of Korea was achieved under the Silla dynasty in the seventh century A.D. It was during the period of this dynasty that Mahayana Buddhism and its related art forms diffused from China into Korea. The Silla dynasty gave way to the Koryo dynasty (918-1392), which, after a period of Mongol domination, was replaced by the Yi dynasty (1392-1910). The Yi dynasty, which lasted over 500 years until the Japanese annexation in 1910, saw the development of many socio-cultural patterns that continue to have a significant influence in modern Korean life. Among the main factors were (1) the establishment of the national capitol at Seoul; (2) the introduction of Confucianism, accompanied by the decline of Buddhism; (3) the invention of a precise phonetic system for writing the Korean language (later called han'gul); (4) the creation of a strong, bureaucratic central government; and, perhaps most importantly, (5) the full elaboration of a pervasive and complex system of social stratification. The stratification system consisted of a hierarchical series of status groups, usually referred to as "classes" in the literature, sanctioned and supported by Confucian precepts. At the top of the hierarchy, immediately below the King and his royal clan, were the yangban or upperclass, consisting of civil and military officials and the large landowners. There was a sharp social cleavage between the yangban and their fellow Koreans. They were distinguished from the rest of the population by high prestige, power, wealth, dress, social behavior, and education which was primarily in Confucian classics and etiquette. Next in order were the chungin or "middle people," a small group composed of petty government functionarieslawyers, bookkeepers, interpreters, copyists, astronomers, painters, doctors, etc. Below the chungin came the vast bulk of the society made up of commoners (sangmin). These were the artisans, merchants, and farmers. At the bottom of the scale was a large "low-born" class called ch'onmin, which included slaves and members of such outcaste occupations as actors, kisaeng (female entertainers comparable to the Japanese geishas), female shamans (mudang), basket weavers, and butchers. Generally, mobility between strata was very restricted (cf. Reischauer and Fairbank 1960: 428; and Koh 1959: 70-117). One of the most distinctive characteristics of traditional Korea (which it shared with Imperial China) was that although a striking rural-urban gap existed in terms of standards and styles of living, the kind of sharp cultural discontinuity between village and city that Redfield (1956) emphasizes, does not seem to be really applicable to pre-modern Korean society. The cultural patterns that Redfield differentiates with the concepts of the "great" (urban) and "little" (rural) traditions (Redfield 1956: esp. 70-71) existed together in cities, towns, and villages. "Men of letters moved back and forth frequently from rural to urban settings, while classical learning, the arts, religion, and philosophy flourished under thatched roofs as well as behind city walls" (Brandt 1971: 33-34). According to Brandt, it was only with the adoption of a progress- and change-oriented ideology during the last 50 years or so under Japanese and American influence, that contrasts between rural and urban "designs for living" have been intensified. It is obviously impossible to do justice here to the cultural changes and range of life styles which have developed in Korea since the end of the Yi dynasty. For detailed information, the reader may consult two useful handbooks which have been written on North and South Korea, respectively (cf. Clare et al. 1969; and Shinn et al. 1969). Other major source include Osgood (1951) and Dallet (1874). Most foreign observers have emphasized rural Korea's cultural homogeneity. One village seems very much like another with regard to language, food, architecture, family organization, folklore, technology, and clothes. Nevertheless, there are important provincial and local differences at both the sociocultural and psychocultural levels. At the core of village organization is a segmentary, exogamous, patrilineal lineage system. Meticulous, written lineage genealogies (chokpo) validate a person's membership in a lineage. Each lineage traces its affiliation with one of the traditional status groups or social classes. The importance of this status differential emerges clearly in Kim Taek Kyoo's study of the village of Hahoe Dong (Kim 1964). This village is the traditional ritual center of the Yu lineage, which claims numerous ancestors in high official positions during the Yi dynasty. Fifty-eight percent of the 166 village households are members of this lineage, but the extent of lineage domination is emphasized more strikingly by the fact that its members control 87 percent of the village land, even after land reform. "Discrimination along traditional class lines is still strong: intermarriage between descendants of the Yu aristocrats and commoner residents of the village never occurs, and members of this kinship group retain a monopoly of prestige, wealth, and power" (Brandt 1971: 9). Using this combination of lineage and class composition, Lee Man-Gap (1960) distinguishes three broad categories of village organization: (1) villages where a formerly aristocratic (yangban) lineage is dominant; (2) those where a commoner (sangmin) lineage is dominant; and (3) those where power and wealth are divided. The third dimension of variation has been formulated by Brandt as two opposing ethical or value systems which affect ordinary, everyday behavior. One is formal and explicit; it is largely lineage-oriented and embodies a clearly structured hierarchical system of rank and authority that is closely linked with Korean aristocratic traditions. The contrasting system reflects an egalitarian community ethic; it is informal and has no set code of moral principles, although many aspects of it are expressed in proverbs and other folk sayings. Among the important values are mutual assistance and cooperation among neighbors, hospitality, generosity, and tolerance in dealing with both kin and non-kin. Which ethical system is dominant in a village makes a great deal of difference in the quality of life of the villagers. Culture summary by Robert O. Lagace and John M. Beierle Brandt, Vincent S. R. A Korean village between farm and sea. Cambridge, Harvard University Press, 1971. 12, 242 p., illus., maps, tables. Clare, Kenneth G. Area handbook for the Republic of Korea. By Kenneth G. Clare et al. Washington, D.C., U. S. Government Printing Office, 1969. Dallet, Charles. Histoire de l'eglise de Coree V. 1. [A history of the church in Korea]. Paris, Victor Palme, 1874. 192, 387 p. charts, map. Information Please Almanac. New York, 1975. Kim Taek Kyoo. The cultural structure of a consanguineous village Ch'ong Ku University, 1964. (In Korean with English summary.) Koh, Hesung Chun. Religion, social structure and economic development in Yi Dynasty Korea. Dissertation (Sociology) Boston University, 1959. Lee Man-Gap. The social structure of Korean villages. Seoul, Korean Research Center, 1960. (In Korean with English summary.) Osgood, Cornelius. The Koreans and their culture. New York, Ronald Press [1951]. 16, 387 p. illus., maps. Redfield, Robert. Peasant society and culture: an anthropological approach to civilization. Chicago, University of Chicago Press, 1956. Reischauer, Edwin O. East Asia: the great tradition. By Edwin O. Reischauer and John K. Fairbank. Boston, Houghton Mifflin Co., 1960. Shinn, Rinn-Sup. Area handbook for North Korea. By Rinn-Sup Shinn et al. Washington, D. C., U. S. Government Printing Office, 1969. Voegelin, D. F. and F. M. Classification and index of the world's languages. New York, Elsevier, 1977. 7854

    36. Tiscali - Search
    Official Webpage Information about history, society, culture WorldRover Guide north korea north korea maps, facts bekijk ook regional Asia Regions East Asia
    http://directory.tiscali.nl/Regional/Asia/North_Korea
    home search categorie«n Regional ... Asia  .North Korea Arts and En... Business an... Education Government ... Weather Websites in de categorie North Korea
    About North Korea Complete resource on N.Korea with information on its culture, art, business, news, travel, and history. Asiaco North Korea Includes news, business, travel, jobs, and health information about North Korea. DPR Korea Trade A DPRK Trade Website: Commercial Website of DPRK (North Korea) for introducing new inventions, technologies and products of the DPR. of Korea. North Korea Contains statistical data and links to news, travel, weather, and government. North Korea From WorldSkip.com. News, information, products and services from North Korea. North Korea Official Webpage Information about history, society, culture, folk and unification. North Korean Studies The site is focused on North Korea (DPRK), its relations with Russia and the other CIS republics. Also available materials about Soviet Koreans and North Korean refugees in China. World Desk Reference General country information, demographics, and statistics on North Korea from Dorling Kindersley. WorldRover Guide: North Korea North Korea maps, facts, and travel guides.

    37. U.S.-North Korea Talks
    permanent solution must include the active participation of the other regional players. If history is any indicator of the future, north korea will continue
    http://www.heritage.org/Research/AsiaandthePacific/WM267.cfm
    site map help contact us The Heritage Foundation ... Asia and the Pacific U.S.-North Korea Talks Policy Archive:
    view by date
    Policy Archive:
    view by issue
    ... Return Home U.S.-North Korea Talks: Forging Security Beyond the Nuclear Issue by Balbina Y. Hwang
    WebMemo #267
    This week in Beijing, on April 23–25, U.S. officials meet and talk with their North Korean and Chinese counterparts, ostensibly to resolve the current standoff over the North Korean regime’s nuclear proliferation. This meeting can be an important initial step toward a peaceful solution to a serious global threat. The Bush Administration should use these meetings as a short-term opportunity to communicate clearly and unequivocally its principled stance that North Korea must act to reduce its full array of threats, both conventional and nuclear. In the long term, North Korea must agree to return to its previous nuclear status, adopt a multilateral framework to verify its compliance with international agreements, initiate a comprehensive plan to reduce or reposition its forces, curtail its missile and arms sales, and pursue domestic reforms to alleviate the hardships suffered by the North Korean people. The Bush Administration should back this position with a comprehensive plan that combines muscular diplomacy, security measures, and economic sanctions and inducements that are well-coordinated with regional players.

    38. Curt Weldon Speech
    north korea s Missile Capability and the regional and International To some extent by China and especially by north korea. It will go down in history for doing
    http://www.icasinc.org/lectures/cuwl1998.html
    The ICAS Lectures No. 98-1124-CUW North Korea's Missile Capability
    and the
    Regional and International Security Implications
    Curt Weldon November 24, 1998. Institute for Corean-American Studies, Inc. 965 Clover Court, Blue Bell, PA 19422 Tel : (610) 277-9989; (610) 277-0149
    Fax: (610) 277-3992
    Email: icas@icasinc.org
    http://www.icasinc.org
    [Editor's note: This is a transcription of a recording of a speech by Curt Weldon. Undecipherable or unclear elements are indicated by double asterisks. Paragraph breaks were added. sjk ] North Korea's Missile Capability and the Regional and International Security Implications The Hon. Curt Weldon (R-7th, PA)
    United States Representative
    I am happy to be here. I'm happy to share some thoughts with you about security and what's happening in Washington. And especially security as it relates to the Pacific Rim, as it relates to China, Korea, and our concerns are relative to that area of the world. My interest is very much in Asia and what's happening and my interest is going to grow because of my committee assignment. I also am a senior member of the science committee and on that committee I hope to oversee about 40 billion dollars of non-defense research funding which includes all the funding for NASA, N**, N**, NIH and all of those non-defense agencies. So between my subcommittee and my full committee I am involved in one way of the other in about 75 to 80 million dollars of your tax money that funds all of the research in this country from the standpoint of the federal government.

    39. North Korea Zone: North Korea Freedom Day
    Response from today s activists history will be your Today s regional Briefing focuses on korea, courtesy Headings Include The DPRK (north korea); The ROK
    http://nkzone.typepad.com/nkzone/2004/04/north_korea_fre_1.html
    hostName = '.typepad.com';
    North Korea zone
    A zone for discussion and information exchange about North Korea.
    About NKzone
    • (banner photo: Chan U Chan
      This is a "blog-zone" on North Korea: an interactive site that helps you stay informed and also helps you share what YOU know about North Korea with other people around the world. Have you been to North Korea? Do you know people who have? Do you have information and insights about North Korea that you'd like to share? Please share your knowledge with NKzone. Email NKzone in English
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    40. Jane's Sentinel North Korea Special Report - Jane's International Security News
    would herald an unprecedented regional arms race include An assessment of north korea s Armed Forces military inventories and procurement history; Overview of
    http://www.janes.com/security/short_urls/sentpromo030304.shtml
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