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      • KCI등재

        북조선로동당의 당원확장과 당의 변화

        이주철 경남대학교 북한대학원 1998 현대북한연구 Vol.1 No.1

        <Abstract>This study explains how the North Korean Workers' Party(NKWP), the preceding organization of the KWP, was formed in the 1940s. Most existing studies focus on t도 activities of the top rank and file members to explain the formation of the NKWP. The sub-organizations of the Party has received little attention, and the attitudes of the common party members toward the overall process of constructing new state of North Korea have been veiled. This study highlights the membership expansion of the Party at the lower level organizations in the local areas. Although the NKWP was created through the integration of the North Korean Communist Party(NKCP) and the Korean New People's Party(KNPP) in August 1946, it basically took over the organizational principles and characteristics of the NKCP. The KNPP, which the Yenan group of Communists established in February 1946, was a prrty representing the interests of intellectuals and small bourgeoisie. Before the establishment of the NKW P, the NKCP led by Kim Il Sung's anti-Japanese partisan group played a major role in the North Korean Interim People's Committee(NKIPC) as a pseudo central government and in the local People's committees as local self-governing organs. As the NKIPC implemented successful social reforms such a land reform, the NKCP rapidly increased its membership by mobilizing the peasants who were the beneficiaries of the reform.There was considerable change in the composition of the Party's membership. In the NKCP, intellectuals, merchants and other elements occupied 36 percent. However the member of farmers and especially workers increased after the establishment of the NKWP. The numerical expansion contributed to strengthening the Party's local organs and the Party emphasized the education of the new members to become "the faithful workers."At the second Party Congress in 1948, the NKWP tighted its recruitment policy. For example, a person who wanted to join the Party was required to have at least one-year probation and one guarantor. The NKWP sought loyal and disciplined members, rather than simply expanding its numbers. It made efforts to unite and purify the Party in order to become a hegemonic one capable of playing a major role in constructing a unified Communist country in Korea. In the development of the NKWP, Kim Il Sung utilized the overwhelming power base of the grassroots members to survive the power struggle within the power bloc.,

      • KCI등재

        북한의 식량난과 인구변화 추이, 1961∼1998

        남성욱 경남대학교 북한대학원 1999 현대북한연구 Vol.2 No.1

        <Abstract> This paper focuses on how the grain shortage has affected the population in North Korea. In February 1990, the South Korean government disclosed that the population of North Korea has decreased by 2.5-3 million from the period of 1995 to March of 1998 due to food shortages. This document originated from North Korea during its preparation for the election of representatives of the Supreme Congress that was scheduled for July 26, 1998. This report is supported by the evidence of the shortage of food from consecutive bad weather conditions since 1993. Furthermore, the persistent decline in the yield since 1990 indicates, in part, a structural cause rather than entirely due to natural adversity, such as floods or droughts. Of note, North Korea could not import sufficient quantity of grain from the international market because of deficiency of foreign currency. Another indication of the population decrease is that in 1998, North Korea elected the same number of representatives of the Supreme Congress as in 1992. Election laws stipulate that one representative for every 30,000 people are elected. Therefore, it can be estimated that the population has been constant during 1995 to 1998. In application of the annual increasing rate of 1.5 percent in North Korea, the population has decreased by about 3 million. Traditionally, research on North Korea has dealt mainly with politics, while nonpolitical issues, such as grain shortages has been neglected. In order to broaden our scope of North Korea, we should also analyze nonthraditional research. The grain shortage will have significant impact on North Korea's future. It is urgent to take measures to prevent population decrease. Key Words: North Korea, Grain Shortage, Population Change.

      • KCI등재

        자립적 경제발전전략과 북한적 정치체제의 형성과정

        이성봉 경남대학교 북한대학원 1999 현대북한연구 Vol.2 No.1

        <Abstract> The purpose of this study is to prove that North korea's self-reliant economic development strategy operated as an important variable in the process of constructing its political system. Previous studies on the political system of North Korea have considered political elements such as ideology, Kim Ⅱ-sung's will to power, and external relations as constructing factors of its political system. These approaches resulted from the perception that North Korea is more ideology-oriented and politics-centered nation than other nations. However, the leadership of North Korea has put priority on economic growth and perceived that as a major function of its political system since the Korean War. In North Korea, this signifies that politics not only functions as a major factor but also is highly subject to economy.The self-reliant strategy for economic growth of North Korea was "to construct an economic system where they can reproduce by themselves with a connection between national production and consumption resulted from mobilizing human and material resources." However, this strategy of North Korea only caused a serious conflict with the Soviet Union and it was also impossible to establish a multi-sided and synthetic economic system in North Korean situation where capital and technology were very poor. Therefore, North Korea could not help but find another special way to accomplish self-reliant strategy for economic growth. Self-reliant strategy was achieved in three aspects. (1) The strategy created and systematized a unique political ideology that lead to the spontaneity and devotion of the people, which was needed to accomplish this strategy. This was expressed as a form of 'Juche Ideology'. (2) North Korea established a centralized control system in order to mobilize its human and material resources more efficiently. As a result, the Korean Worker's Party came to have a much greater organizing ability and influence than any other socialist states' parties. (3) North Korea completely organized and collectivized the people to extract their devotion and sacrifice.By the end of the 1960's, these characters of North Korea's political system reached the extreme form through the policy of establishing independent military defense capability as well as an independent economy. This brought about new debates and splits, what caused the leadership to be reorganized t o a great extent and established the system of 'One Thought'. The strategy for modernization of military required high speed growth and priority on heavy-industry. As a result, the society was wholly dominated by revolutionary high tides and the people's destitution and sacrifice. Finally in 1970, when the Fifth Party Congress was held, the political system of North Korea made it possible for Kim Ⅱ-sung to have absolute power on the basis of 'Juche Ideology' that was developed in the process of pushing the self-reliant strategy for economic growth, powerful controlling mechanisms of the party, and the people who were submissive to the system. Conclusively, it can be said that North Korea's policy for economic growth performed a function as a principal variable in the process of constructing its political system.

      • KCI등재

        북한연구 방법론 : 재론 A Rejoinder to My Critics

        강정인 경남대학교 북한대학원 1998 현대북한연구 Vol.1 No.1

        <Abstract>This article critically reviews recent debates which have been raised since the publication of te author's two articles in 1993, criticizing the so-called "immanent approach" which was originally proposed by Song Doo-Yul as a new approach to North Korean Studies in 1988. Thus, the primary purpose of the article is to rebut the author's critics and re-confirm his original position. First of all, the author criticizes Song's rejoinder to the author which distinguishes between the immanent and the external approaches in terms of the Kantain concepts of the "immanent (empirical)-transcendent" pair, focusing mainly on the vagueness surrounding his us of the word immanent (empirical). "Secondly, it critically examines Kim Yon-Chol's argument which claims that the criteria of distinction between the two approaches are vague and that the external approach is transcendent. Next the paper criticizes the conceptual problems inherent in Lee Chong-Sok's conception of the "immanent-critical approach." Finally, it discusses the problems and limits facing the "phenomenological approach" advanced by Choi Wan-Kyu. In conclusion, the author re-emphasizes his original position that stresses the conflictual and complementary aspects of the two approaches, based on the inherent duality of human action.

      • KCI등재

        소련의 대한반도-북한정책 관련 기구 및 인물 분석 : 해방∼1948. 12. Military Organs and Personnels

        기광서 경남대학교 북한대학원 1998 현대북한연구 Vol.1 No.1

        <Abstract>This article is an analysis on the Soviet Union's policy organs and the people in charge of the Korean peninsula and North Korea between the liberation of Korea on August 15,1945 and December 1948. The purpose of this analysis is to look into the organization and system of the policy-making body and examine the function and special features of each organ and the role of each official involved, rather than to try and grasp the character and concrete details of the Soviet Unions Korea policy.In formulating the Soviet Union's policy on Korea, the Moscow leadership made decisions based on it and the military implemented the policy decisions The Moscow leadership consisted of the Central Committee of the Communist Party and the Government. In the Central Committee of the Party, the Politburo, which was the most powerful organ in the Soviet Union, the Party Secretariat, the External Policy Department and the Directorate of the Propaganda and Agitation were involved in the decision-making processes. On the Government and military side were the Foreign and the Armed Forces ministries. Under the Ministry of Armed Forces was the General staff and the General political Directorate. These organizations analyzed reports from the military forces in the North Korea and drafted decisions.The regional Soviet military consisted of the Command headquarters of the Maritime Military District, which was responsible for the North Korean area ; the headquarters of the 25th Army which was in charge of policy implementation in North Korea, under which came the Directorate of the Soviet Civil Administration and military komendaturas. Under the two headquarters were various political organs. These organs drafted policies and implemented them. Needless to say, intelligence reports filed by these two organs became the basis for the Soviet Union's policy toward the Korean peninsula and North Korea.In short, if I were to list the command hierarchy of the Soviet Union in North Korea from top to bottom, it would be : the Moscow leadership (the Communist Party Central Committee, the Foreign Ministry, the Armed Forces Ministry)→ (the Headquarters of the Soviet Far Eastern Forces)→ the Headquarters of the Maritime Military District → the 25th Army Headquarters (Directorate of the Soviet Civil Administration and military komendaturas) This article is an analysis on the Soviet Union's policy organs and the people in charge of the Korean peninsula and North Korea between the liberation of Korea on August 15, 1945 and December 1948. The purpose of this analysis is to look into the organization and system of the policy-making body and examine the function and special features of each organ and the role of each official involved, rather than to try and grasp the character and concrete details of the Soviet Union's Korea policy. In formulating the Soviet Union's policy on Korea, the Moscow leadership made decisions based on it and the military implemented the policy decisions. The Moscow leadership consisted of the Central Committee of the Communist Party and the Government. In the Central Committee of the Party, the Politburo, which was the most powerful organ in the Soviet Union, the Party Secretariat, the External Policy Department and the Directorate of the Propaganda and Agitation were involved in the decision-making processes. On the Government and military side were the Foreign and the Armed Forces ministries. Under the Ministry of Armed Forces was the General staff and the General political Directorate. These organizations analyzed reports from the military forces in the North Korea and drafted decisions. The regional Soviet military consisted of the Command headquarters of the Maritime Military District, which was responsible for the North Korean area ; the headquarters of the 25th Army which was in charge of policy implementation in Worth Korea, under which came the Directorate of the Soviet Civil Administration and military komendaturas. Under the two headquarters were various political organs. These organs drafted policies and implemented them. Needless to say, intelligence reports filed by these two organs became the basis for the Soviet Union's policy toward the Korean peninsula and North Korea. In short, if I were to list the command hierarchy of the Soviet Union in North Korea from top to bottom, it would be : the Moscow leadership (the Communist Party Central Committee, the Foreign Ministry, the Armed Forces Ministry) → (the Headquarters of the Soviet Far Eastern Forces) → the Headquarters of the Maritime Military District → the 25th Army Headquarters (Directorate of the Soviet Civil Administration and military komendaturas)

      • KCI등재

        통일문제 문학과 현실의 거리 : 북한소설에서 '실천적 리얼리즘'의 모색 Problems of Unification

        노귀남 경남대학교 북한대학원 1998 현대북한연구 Vol.1 No.1

        <Abstract>North Korean literature is a product of the NKCP. The writers believe that their literary goals and writing methods are correct and are never skeptical of their literary meaning. South Korean literature by contrast has nothing to unite its aims and methods. Obviously, no meanings are absolutely right. South Korea's literary autonomy and aims are different from North Korea,--their literary facts contain different values according to their different world view.There is a need for a meta-theory to criticize North Korean literature. This paper focuses on the theory of realism and comments on socialistic realism. In realism it is important to relate between fiction and reality and to interpret how we may apply literature to real social problems.In response to these issues, I propose the concept of "相"(laksana(. This term is a monistic Oriental World View. It is the monism of being, knowledge, and praxis. "Practical realism" invokes "相". Thekey words here are mediation (媒介) and type (典型).This theory provides important meaning for literary practice as related to literature and reality. Accoridng to the monistic thinking the meaning simultaneously involves "mediated meaning" grasping both reality and historical problems. There are two kinds of meaning. One is fragmentary, the other is mediated that is multifocused and stereoscopic. In this case, character, affair (episode) and situation are closely related to one another.The laksana simultaneously establishes the subject and create the meaning of the text reading over agin. North Korean fiction is practical writing. The significance of its praxis can narrow the distance between fiction and reality regarding the problems of unification.

      • KCI등재

        1950년대 북한 문학과 사회주의 리얼리즘

        김성수 경남대학교 북한대학원 1999 현대북한연구 Vol.2 No.2

        <Abstract> This article analyzes the historical aspect of North Korean literature of the 1950s, a time in which the damages of the Korean War were repaired and the foundation of socialism was established. During this period, there was a shift in government policy concerning literature as well as a the reconstruction of the North Korean literary league, thus paving the way for the diverse controversies of realism.In 1953, a bitter“war”against the remaining vestige of bourgeois aesthetics, waged by a new group of writers, brought about the establishment of socialist realism literature. The advocates of the socialist realism literature, however, were criticized in 1956 for its“schematistic fallacy”; at the same time, the opponents of the socialist realism literature were in turn attacked for their right-wing tendencies, which was understood as“revisionism”by the advocates of socialist realism literature. Kim Il Sung who did not permit any criticism that would jeopardize his political power, emphasized the propagandic aspect of literature by maintaining that they should promote“chollimawoondong.”Consequently, the possibility for the development of socialist literature was sharply diminished.

      • KCI등재

        1950년대 북한의 정치와 권력 : 인전대적 동원 체제 형성과 3중의 권력 투쟁

        박형중 경남대학교 북한대학원 1999 현대북한연구 Vol.2 No.2

        〈Abstract〉During the 1950's the structure of the North Korean governing party and its relations with society were remolded to fit a system termed transmission-mobilization. In doing so, the hierarchical relations of order issuing and obedience were established. The transmission-mobilization system was geared at two main objectives ; maintaining political stability and increasing productivity. The system was able to gain acceptance in the presence of a collective will among the people, autonomy among all members of society and the renunciation of the social organization. The transmission-mobilization system was the result of a three fold power struggle in the North Korean society in the 1950's. The first power struggle was among certain factions and elites in the upper layer of the Korean Worker's Party. The second was a struggle between the party center and its agents in the middle-lower layer of the party. The center wished to totally manipulate the will and interests of the power agents, but the agents wanted to protect their autonomy and to expand their power resources. The third power struggle was between the party as a whole and society, including workers and peasants. The party wished to deprivate individuals autonomy and obliterate the possibility of collective interest representation in the society. The attempt of the party core to accelerate economic growth in the 1950's aggravated tensions, resulting in periodic purges of a great number of the faction elites, power agents, and member society. The three power struggles were developed on the basis of the socialist institution of politics and the economy, and the strategy of rapid economic growth. The institution and economic strategies produced peculiar socialist tensions. They also gave way to peculiar socialist rules and interpretations of the tensions, forcing society to adapt its behaviors.

      • KCI등재

        정전 후 1950년대 북한의 정치 변동과 권력 재편

        백준기 경남대학교 북한대학원 1999 현대북한연구 Vol.2 No.2

        AbstractThis article focuses on North Korea in the 1950s following the Korean War when the basic framework and political mechanism of the current North Korean socialist regime were formulated. The purpose of this paper is to shed light on : how the political actors of high politics in the North recognized the realistic problems facing them at that time ; how resolving problems evolved and erupted political rivalry and conflicts ; why political conflicts went through such a `catastrophic, disastrous coordination' to become the current noncompetitive, closed political mechanism ; and what implications the defeated political forces have in the political history of North Korea. Most researchers agree that the 1950s in North Korea meant a period of great potentials that provided the North with various possible ways of shifting its government. The period also represented an era of abundance in a political sense.The post-Korean War period had the following implications for the North Korean regime : First, the political elite groups and political factions outside of the inner circle led by Kim Il Sung were finally excluded from the central power circle in the power struggles that ensued in high-level politics in 1953 to 1956. The political dynamics have since disappeared in the North. In the wake of the massive cleanup campaign, 1957-1959, the realignment of the political terrain which began in high-level politics spread to low-level politics and then to the whole society, resulting in the oneness of a single leader led by Kim Il Sung.Second, in social and economic terms, full-fledged and widespread fundamental socialist reconstruction occurred among the citizens and industrial fields, providing a basic framework for the current North Korean-style socialist economic system.Third, a foundation for an independent diplomatic line was laid down in the 1950s, that is, the engagement of the Soviet Union and China in the North's power struggle in 1956 failed and the socialist camp fell apart. Consequently, this aided in paving the way for an independent diplomatic line for North Korea.Fourth, the North, after post-war restoration, economic recovery, and the completion of a socialist system through three-and five-year development plans, established a reunification strategy based on its `economic superiority.' It attempted to ease tensions between the South and the North and attain a state of peace on the Korean peninsula by putting forward a series of proposals, including the confederation proposal. This proposal suggested commodities and resource assistance toward the South and free economic and cultural exchanges. These attempts in the area of unification are meaningful in that they constitute a prototype of the North's institutional approach toward unification.This study notes that social and economic factors basically caused changes in other arenas. The 1956 political crisis, represented by the `August plenary session,' took center stage in the political changes in North Korea. This paper analyses points of disputes and standpoints with respect to the political changes in the North, which were destined to define the North's political picture for the following 40 years.The article also explores the causes of the 1956 political crisis, which represents a culmination of the political changes, in terms of economic restoration following the war, establishment and implementation of development strategies and ensuing social and political crises. Finally, through the so-called `Choi Chang Ik's anti-party conspiracy and spy incident' and `the third-party incident,' this article analyzes the process in which the power struggles at the heart of high-level politics featured in the 1956 `August plenary session' expanded toward national organs and society as a whole, contributing to the realignment of power in the political leadership of North Korea.

      • KCI등재

        북한 경제 연구의 딜레마와 제언 : Dilemma and Suggestion 개혁 논의를 중심으로

        고현욱 경남대학교 북한대학원 1999 현대북한연구 Vol.2 No.2

        <Abstract> This paper reexamines the concept of economic reform and the operationalization of it within our framework. It emphasizes that economic reforms are not necessarily equated with measures toward market-oriented economies. Economic reform is defined as part of economic policy applied to gain long-range sustained productivity growth, irrespective of the nature of the economic SYSTEMFurthermore, the targets and tools of economic reform are specified in detail for the convenience of analyzing its impact on economic performance. Looking at the interrelationships among reform policies, we can explain the reason for the success or failure of economic reform.It is premature to be either totally optimistic or pessimistic about the future prospects of the North Korean economy. If North Korea manages to survive the crisis, it will be the only case where a socialist approach has proved viable. If North Korea fails to overcome, it will be forced to choose between giving up “self-reliance” or accepting total collapse.A grand theory to study the North Korean economy does not exist. We can make progress in the research of North Korea with a little effort to apply the framework of analysis, whether it is borrowed from Western methodology or from a North Korean perspective.

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