Post-Communist Transition Revisited: The North Korean Regime in a Comparative Authoritarian Perspective

The view of convergence in terms of process of direction of change in the former state socialist countries invites questions about the cases of non-transition and their typological regime features. The paper examines the North Korean regime to assess its uniqueness in the path of post-communist tran...

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Main Author: Soyoung Kwon
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: National Sun Yat-sen University 2018-07-01
Series:Contemporary Chinese Political Economy and Strategic Relations: An International Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:http://rpb115.nsysu.edu.tw/var/file/131/1131/img/2374/151917443.pdf
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spelling doaj-bb25a33bd4454da19f37d28569652d382020-11-24T23:33:14ZengNational Sun Yat-sen UniversityContemporary Chinese Political Economy and Strategic Relations: An International Journal2410-96812410-96812018-07-0142559590Post-Communist Transition Revisited: The North Korean Regime in a Comparative Authoritarian PerspectiveSoyoung Kwon0George Mason University, KoreaThe view of convergence in terms of process of direction of change in the former state socialist countries invites questions about the cases of non-transition and their typological regime features. The paper examines the North Korean regime to assess its uniqueness in the path of post-communist transition and plausible explanations to the divergent outcome. North Korea’s non-transition owes much to its unique behavioural features derived from different historical experience, leadership, legitimation, and political culture. The country-specific developments challenge the general transition paradigm, and warrant the behavioural approaches rather than institutional approaches to transition in studying the cases of non-transition. In regard to North Korea, the question is no longer finding the prototype of transition that is recommendable, but accepting the country-specific development process in search for alternatives, which may lead to a distinctive path and process. The observation of North Korea invites a new comparative perspective on the remaining socialist countries in Asia, which brings the framework of transition from the authoritarian rule in assessing the prospects and challenges of political change.http://rpb115.nsysu.edu.tw/var/file/131/1131/img/2374/151917443.pdfpost-communist transitionnon-transitionNorth Korean regimepolitical elitesauthoritarianism
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Soyoung Kwon
spellingShingle Soyoung Kwon
Post-Communist Transition Revisited: The North Korean Regime in a Comparative Authoritarian Perspective
Contemporary Chinese Political Economy and Strategic Relations: An International Journal
post-communist transition
non-transition
North Korean regime
political elites
authoritarianism
author_facet Soyoung Kwon
author_sort Soyoung Kwon
title Post-Communist Transition Revisited: The North Korean Regime in a Comparative Authoritarian Perspective
title_short Post-Communist Transition Revisited: The North Korean Regime in a Comparative Authoritarian Perspective
title_full Post-Communist Transition Revisited: The North Korean Regime in a Comparative Authoritarian Perspective
title_fullStr Post-Communist Transition Revisited: The North Korean Regime in a Comparative Authoritarian Perspective
title_full_unstemmed Post-Communist Transition Revisited: The North Korean Regime in a Comparative Authoritarian Perspective
title_sort post-communist transition revisited: the north korean regime in a comparative authoritarian perspective
publisher National Sun Yat-sen University
series Contemporary Chinese Political Economy and Strategic Relations: An International Journal
issn 2410-9681
2410-9681
publishDate 2018-07-01
description The view of convergence in terms of process of direction of change in the former state socialist countries invites questions about the cases of non-transition and their typological regime features. The paper examines the North Korean regime to assess its uniqueness in the path of post-communist transition and plausible explanations to the divergent outcome. North Korea’s non-transition owes much to its unique behavioural features derived from different historical experience, leadership, legitimation, and political culture. The country-specific developments challenge the general transition paradigm, and warrant the behavioural approaches rather than institutional approaches to transition in studying the cases of non-transition. In regard to North Korea, the question is no longer finding the prototype of transition that is recommendable, but accepting the country-specific development process in search for alternatives, which may lead to a distinctive path and process. The observation of North Korea invites a new comparative perspective on the remaining socialist countries in Asia, which brings the framework of transition from the authoritarian rule in assessing the prospects and challenges of political change.
topic post-communist transition
non-transition
North Korean regime
political elites
authoritarianism
url http://rpb115.nsysu.edu.tw/var/file/131/1131/img/2374/151917443.pdf
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