[학술논문] Identity Politics in the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK)
...revolved around the usual socialist propaganda that national sovereignty rested in the members of the proletarian class such as the inmin (laborers and farmers). However, in the aftermath of Kim Il-sung’s establishment of the Juche ideology as a means to prop up his dictatorship, the North pursued a form of politics that saw national sovereignty be transferred from the inmin of North Korea to the Great...
[학술논문] 국내적 인권과 국제적 인권? -인권 개념의 이중성에 대한 소고-
...Rights in History, however, disagrees with such conventional understanding. What we call human rights today is a revolutionary, transnational concept created and advocated outside the national sovereignty. This is fundamentally different from, and irreconcilable with, the rights originating from the natural law ideas and the French Revolution which were closely bound up with the creation of the sovereign...
[학위논문] 김정은 시기 성명·담화 분석을 통해 본 북한의 대외 커뮤니케이션 전략 연구
...among the South Korean population, often framed within the discourse of reunification. In the later period, however, the emphasis shifted toward asserting the legitimacy of North Korea’s sovereignty and its claim to nuclear weapons as a means of self-defense, particularly in the face of international sanctions and pressure.
Fourth, changes in rhetorical style were observed. During the...
[학술논문] North Korea and Crimes against Humanity: A ‘Responsibility to Protect’ Perspective
North Korea has long proven unable and unwilling to protect its citizens. Currently, North Korea faces a deteriorating situation marked by chronic humanitarian disasters and human rights violations within the state’s political detention camp system. The inhumane treatment of citizens inside these camps, as well as violations during the sentencing and deportation process, has become a symbol of
[학술논문] 국제법상 미승인국가의 법률적용에 관한 고찰 -북한 저작물의 법적 보호를 중심으로-
...and concluded that South Korean copyrights laws may be applied to North Korean literary works. In other words, South Korean Constitution does not allow any other kinds of sovereignty in the Korean peninsula except the sovereignty of the South Korea. Furthermore, the South and the North Koreas do not recognize as a “State” with each other. Therefore, any kinds of legally binding documents...