THE TWO KOREAS
Tags: KOREAN reunification question (1945- ); KOREAN War, 1950-1953
Related Articles
- Unification Process and Division Process. Kang Man-gil // Korea Focus;Sep/Oct2006, Vol. 14 Issue 3, p90
The article discusses the division and unification processes for the Korean peninsula. The division of the Korea started with drawing of the 38th parallel line around August 10, 1945 as a territorial demarcation line. Later, a state division was reached with the establishment of separate...
- A new proposal for the reunification of the two Koreas: Economic issues. Lim, Yang Taek // Journal of Asian Economics;Winter97, Vol. 8 Issue 4, p547
Present information on a plan for the reunification of North and South Korea of the United Nations. Detailed information on the plan; Discussion of economic issues which are likely to present themselves during the unification process.
- A chance for detente in Korea. Harrison, S.S. // World Policy Journal;Fall91, Vol. 8 Issue 4, p599
Looks at how North and South Korea remain locked in a costly military confrontation that undermines their economic and political stability and paralyzes progress toward reunification. North Korea's pursuit of conciliatory policies toward South Korea, the United States, and Japan; US policy's...
- Korean national community reunification formula. Shuja, Sharif M. // Contemporary Review;Jan1994, Vol. 264 Issue 1536, p25
Discusses the advantages and disadvantages of the reunification of North and South Korea. Korean National Community Unification Formula of South Korean President Rof Tae Woo; Rejection of the formula by Pyongyang; Difficulty of reuniting a nation divided and ruled by different regimes for over...
- The digest: Other countries. Wooster, Martin Morse // American Enterprise;Jul/Aug97, Vol. 8 Issue 4, p90
Presents a summary of the report `Hastening Korean Reunification,' by Nicholas Eberstadt.
- NCC and Korean unification. // Christian Century;10/14/92, Vol. 109 Issue 29, p895
Reports that at a time when reunification talks between the governments of North Korea and South Korea are proceeding delicately, leaders of the National Council of Churches, including its Korean-born president, are raising reunification as an election-year issue. Syngman Rhee, the council's...
- Can the Koreas unite? Hammes, S.; Manning, S. // Scholastic Update;3/20/92, Vol. 124 Issue 13, p4
Examines the starkly different economies and political systems of North Korea and South Korea. How South Korea has gone from being an autocratic government under its first president Syngman Rhee to a democracy with free-market capitalism today; Why the South Korean government is reluctant to...
- Hunger's plea in North Korea stirs South Korea to plot a way to unity. Platt, Kevin // Christian Science Monitor;5/8/97, Vol. 89 Issue 114, p1
Focuses on the efforts of China to unify North and South Korea. How North Korea's Communist leadership has affected the economic development of the country; What South Korea plans to do to help combat famine experienced in North Korea; Possibility that a free-market democracy will reign in North...
- South Korea's urge to merge. Watson, R. // Newsweek;10/31/1988, Vol. 112 Issue 18, p38
Report that South Korean President Roh Tae Woo is under political pressure to produce progress toward national unification, and tensions have already eased a bit with Roh's efforts. After 43 years of isolation, however, North and South Korea face difficult compromises to achieve a reunion ...


