A Region of Their Making

A Region of Their Making PDF

Author: Chong-gŏn Ch'oe

Publisher:

Published: 2006

Total Pages: 288

ISBN-13:

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Abstract: How could one explain and characterize relative peace, security and prosperity in Northeast Asia (NEA) for the last two decades? What have we missed out theoretically in terms of seeing the then future of NEA? The dissertation challenges the prevailing pessimistic arguments about NEA security by criticizing their analytical failure to assess the progressive trends of regional interactions. In this vein, the dissertation re-characterizes the 17 years of the Post Cold War in the region as the surprising peace where regional states have achieved a progressive, relatively well-coordinated, cooperative, and prudent regional order. This dissertation provides a new framework of explaining NEA's regional order throughout the Post Cold War period. I argue that many different stimuli at structural level occurred for the last 17 years in NEA. But I also find the persistence of such ideas as war aversion, stability for development and regional prosperity throughout the region. And the overall outcome in Northeast Asian for the last 17 years is the avoidance of major harm and the progressive development of regional order. In order to explain the progressive regional order in NEA, I develop an analytical construct, Vision of Regional Order (VRO), to account for the unfolding of regional interactions for the past 17 years from a phenomenological approach. A VRO is states' expectation and understanding about what constitutes suitable behaviors towards neighboring states based on historical memories, perceived threat and perceived economic opportunity. Each VRO provide insights into behavioral disposition, which I call a vector or orientation of the major policy behaviors. I examine the four empirical cases -- the end of the Cold War, the 94 North Korean nuclear crisis, the 97 Asian Financial Crisis, the 2001-5 historical disputes. I find that the goals and preferences of NEA states have affected patterns of regional interactions and produced the surprising peace in the region. Regional orders are products of layers of multiple interactions by deliberately chosen strategies by regional states who implement their visions for the optimal regional order. This means that configurations of regional security dynamics are consciously pursued by states.

Towards a Northeast Asian Security Community

Towards a Northeast Asian Security Community PDF

Author: Bernhard Seliger

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

Published: 2011-06-25

Total Pages: 263

ISBN-13: 1441996575

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The Northeast Asian security environment is closely linked to Korea’s growth perspectives for the future. The spectacular rise of the South Korean economy in the past half century, also known as “Miracle on the Han River,” has been duly highlighted as one of the most successful cases of economic development worldwide. However, among the factors curbing South Korea’s growth perspectives has been, from the very beginning of its rise, the coexistence of the difficult neighbour to the North, Democratic People’s Republic of Korea. While in the cold war this coexistence has been taken as inevitable, after the end of the cold war there were hopes to overcome this obstacle to further growth either through collapse or enhanced cooperation with the North, neither of which became reality. North Korea’s unprecedented aggressiveness and development of long-range ballistic missiles and nuclear devices, made this threat truly an international question with multilateral talks coming into existence as ad-hoc measures to cope with the nuclear crisis. It was then that the idea of a Northeast Asian Security Community was born. The contributions in this book discuss how a peaceful solution of the security problems could not only enhance stability of Korea’s economy and reduce the defense burden considerably (the so-called peace dividend), but would facilitate regional investments safer and regional solutions for common economic problems. When discussing the possibilities of a security framework or, in an institutionalized form, security community, in Northeast Asia, the authors in this volume are realistic as to not fall into the trap of wishful thinking, which so often has characterized approaches to North Korea resulting in disappointment. The past two years again saw the rising of tensions in Northeast Asia and the masterful way in which even an impoverished and isolated country can play its cards. While it seems a new ice age between the two Koreas is possible, nevertheless and maybe even more than ever the search for a stable security framework for Northeast Asia as a precondition for peaceful economic cooperation and development will go on. The chapters in this volume contribute to the ongoing debate to secure peace and development in Northeast Asia, making this book of interest to both academics and policy-makers alike.

Peace Regime Building on the Korean Peninsula and Northeast Asian Security Cooperation

Peace Regime Building on the Korean Peninsula and Northeast Asian Security Cooperation PDF

Author: Seung-Ho Joo

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2016-05-13

Total Pages: 226

ISBN-13: 1317082818

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A permanent peace regime on the Korean peninsula has yet to be achieved even though the Korean War came to a halt more than half a century ago. Without a peace treaty formally ending the Korean War, the two Korean states are technically still at war. The current situation on the Korean peninsula is extremely tense and precarious, and tensions and distrust between the two Koreas and between the U.S. and North Korea escalated in the wake of North Korea's second underground nuclear weapons testing in 2009. The editors of this volume conceptually present a two-track (inter-Korean and international) approach to Korean peninsula peace-regime building. They argue that an inter-Korean and international approach should be pursued simultaneously for the construction of a permanent peace regime on the Korean peninsula. The contributing authors are established specialists and experts on Korean foreign relations and Northeast Asian international relations. As natives of the U.S., Korea, China, and Japan, they provide objective, scholarly and diverse perspectives on the Korean peace regime building.