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

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A01=Seung-Ho Joo
Abduction Issue
Arms Control Approach
arms control policy
Author_Seung-Ho Joo
C. Kenneth Quinones
Category=JP
diplomatic conflict resolution
East Asian geopolitics
Edward A. Olsen
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
inter-Korean Basic Agreement
interstate relations
Japan DPRK Relation
Japan's North Korea Policy
Japan’s North Korea Policy
Korea
Korean Peace
Korean Peace Process
Korean Peace Regime Building
Korean Peace Regime Building Process
Korean Peninsula
Korean Peninsula Peace
Korean Peninsula Peace Regime Building
Korean Peninsula Peace Treaty
koreas
KPPR
multilateral peace negotiation strategies
North Korea's Denuclearization
North Korea's Nuclear
North Korea's Nuclear Issue
North Korean Nuclear
North Korean Nuclear Issue
North Korea’s Denuclearization
North Korea’s Nuclear
North Korea’s Nuclear Issue
Northeast Asian Security
nuclear nonproliferation
Peace Regime
Peace Regime Building
regional security studies
Ren Xiao
Security Regime Building
Seong-Ryoul Cho
War Time
Yong-Sup Han
Yoshinori Kaseda

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138268265
  • Weight: 420g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 17 Nov 2016
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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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.
Dr. Tae-Hwan Kwak, Professor Emeritus of Political Science, Eastern Kentucky University, USA and Dr Seung-Ho Joo, Professor of Political Science, University of Minnesota-Morris, USA

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