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Home arrow Contemporary Issues
Contemporary Issues


The contemporary issues project promotes cross-cultural understanding through public lectures, panel discussions, symposia and workshops that present the rich diversity of Korea and U.S.-Korea relations in historical and contemporary contexts. These programs feature authors, scholars, artists, practitioners from the nonprofit sector, politicians, business leaders and others who are willing to share with the American public their unique expertise on Korea and U.S.-Korea relations.

The focus of this project area is an in-depth exploration of the social, cultural, economic, political, historical and security dimensions of the U.S.-Korea relationship. The objective is to foster a greater awareness, appreciation and understanding of the complexity of these underlying factors, which fuels the power of imagination that is the indispensable wellspring of the capacity for empathy. While divergences of perspectives between Americans and Koreans on many fundamental issues may be inevitable, it is equally inevitable that these divergences must be brought within the realm of imagination to be channeled toward productive engagement based on mutual respect.



A Year in North Korea: Impressions of the DPRK
ImageDecember 5, 2006

As the Swedish ambassador to the DPRK since mid-2005, Mats Foyer has an insider's view of developments inside North Korea. During his lecture, Foyer shared a firsthand account of daily life in Pyongyang before moving on to discuss the country's political situation, economic reforms, food stability and openness to foreign NGOs. Ambassador Foyer's presentation was followed by a Q&A session.

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Shaping the Future of North Korea: Signs of Impending Change?
Tuesday, November 21, 2006 

The 2006 midterm elections transformed the political dynamic in Washington and in the near term, they may also shake-up the U.S. government's approach to North Korea. A change from the current standoff would be welcome, and the panelists convened by The Korea Society and the Asia Society-including Don Zagoria, trustee for the National Committee on American Foreign Policy; Leon Sigal, director of the Northeast Asia Cooperative Security Project at the Social Science Research Council; Gerald Curtis, professor of Political Science at Columbia University and a top U.S. expert on Japan; Evans Revere, a Korea expert at the State Department and a Cyrus Vance Fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations; and Aleksandr Ilitchev, a senior political affairs officer at the United Nations-saw signs that Washington's approach may soon change. (co-sponsored by the Asia Society) Podcast Available!

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Threatened by Peace: Biodiversity and Conservation in the DMZ

Imagewith

Arthur Westing
Conservationist and DMZ Forum Advisor

Friday, November 17, 2006
3:00 PM - 3:30 PM ♦ Registration and Reception
3:30 PM - 4:30 PM ♦ Presentation and Q&A

The Korea Society, 950 Third Avenue, Eighth Floor, New York City
(Building entrance on SW corner of Third Avenue and 57th Street)

Lined with barbed wire, concrete fortifications and hundreds of thousands of wary troops, the 2.5-mile wide demilitarized zone (DMZ) that separates North and South Korea doesn't seem to be a peaceful refuge. But that's exactly what it is for hundreds of species of flora and fauna that have thrived there for 50 years. Undeveloped and superbly guarded, the DMZ has become an ecosystem unto itself, supporting numerous species that have been driven to extinction elsewhere in Asia. For now, the DMZ is still off-limits to humans. But political rapprochement between the North and South has whetted developers' appetites. What does the future hold for this ecological jewel?

Noted conservationist Arthur Westing will explore the unique political and environmental characteristics of the DMZ; its place as the world's most heavily fortified border, as well as its unique status as a trans-boundary nature reserve.  He will also examine the central role of the DMZ in the delicate relationship between a region's environmental needs and social demands. 

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Covering Korea in a Time of Crisis

Image November 8, 2006

If the American public isn't well informed about Korea, the American press is partly to blame. "Coverage of Korea has [traditionally] intensified during crises," like the Korean War, the Kwangju Uprising and the IMF Crisis, says Donald Kirk, longtime Asia correspondent for the International Herald Tribune, Asian Wall Street Journal and South China Morning Post, as well as editor of a new collection of journalism on Korea: Korea Witness: 135 Years of War, Crisis and News in the Land of the Morning Calm. But after the crises abate, Kirk says, so does the media's interest in Korea.

This pattern of alternating excitement and disinterest isn't new. In 1871, photographer Felice Beato became the first American journalist to visit Korea when he rushed to cover the Kanghwa Island conflict, but Beato left shortly after the shooting stopped. News of Korea's anti-Japanese rebellion in March of 1919 reached the outside world only because an American businessman happened to be in the country and filed a report for the Associated Press.

Western journalists who wanted to continue covering Korea after the frenzy of press activity during the Korean War faced opposition from the country's military government. For much of his rule, Park Chung-hee prevented foreign news organizations from setting up bureaus in Seoul. Prior to the late 1970s, when the Wall Street Journal became the first paper to establish a permanent presence in the country, most of what reached the West about Korea came from a small set of Korean correspondents.

Korea became friendlier to press during the 1980s, though the government still regulated access to sources and mandated that official "minders" be present at interviews. By the early 1990s, however, the information control regimen had fallen away entirely.

This openness hasn't done much to change the "crisis coverage" mentality of most American news organizations. The pattern continues to the present. Just weeks ago, the American media was buzzing with stories about North Korea's nuclear test. Now, even with North Korea's return to the Six-Party Talks tenuous, coverage has dropped off precipitously. Meanwhile, major stories in Korea-such as the progress of the ongoing U.S.-ROK free trade talks-go entirely unreported in major papers.

Unfortunately, Kirk feels, there probably isn't much that can change this pattern, at least in the near term.

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