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Security system and peaceful structure of Northeast Asia after Cold War: special reference to Korean peninsula

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Authors

Choi, Chong-Ki

Issue Date
1991
Publisher
Graduate School of Public Administration, Seoul National University
Citation
Korean Journal of Policy Studies, Vol.6, pp. 1-13
Abstract
Order is not always the same as justice. But after radical changes of the Soviet
Union and east Europe, most analysts and specialists of international politics are
trying to predict new world order after Cold War. Of course order gives us
concrete situation for making foreign policies and economic cooperation and pursuing
them. And order at least frees us from instability of international politics.
But order, at the same time, limits each country's right to take alternatives for
her interests. At any rate, we need to analyze the international situation and
predict new world order after Cold War.
What will be the shape of the new world order? Some analyst, such as Prof.
Paul Kennedy in the Rise and Fall of Great Powers describe the change in the world
as the decline of the superpowers, including both the Soviet Union and the
United States. Other specialists such as Prof. Joseph Nye in Bound to Lead: The
Changing Nature of American Power describes that while the United States will
remain the largest state, the world will see a diffusion of power and a growth of
multiple inter-dependencies.
ISSN
1225-5017
Language
English
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/70374
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