RISS 학술연구정보서비스

검색
다국어 입력

http://chineseinput.net/에서 pinyin(병음)방식으로 중국어를 변환할 수 있습니다.

변환된 중국어를 복사하여 사용하시면 됩니다.

예시)
  • 中文 을 입력하시려면 zhongwen을 입력하시고 space를누르시면됩니다.
  • 北京 을 입력하시려면 beijing을 입력하시고 space를 누르시면 됩니다.
닫기
    인기검색어 순위 펼치기

    RISS 인기검색어

      KCI등재

      The Divergent Aid Ideas in North-East Asia:Comparing Japan and South Korea’s Asymmetric ODA toward ASEAN

      한글로보기

      https://www.riss.kr/link?id=A110097621

      • 0

        상세조회
      • 0

        다운로드
      서지정보 열기
      • 내보내기
      • 내책장담기
      • 공유하기
      • 오류접수

      부가정보

      다국어 초록 (Multilingual Abstract) kakao i 다국어 번역

      This study critically analyzes the Official Development Assistance (ODA) policies of Japan and the Republic of Korea (ROK) toward ASEAN (2010–2023). Challenging assumptions of aid homogeneity, the paper argues that the increasingly asymmetric ODA patterns are deeply rooted in their distinct, historically constructed ‘aid ideas’. A quantitative and ideational- institutional framework is used to map these policy divergences.
      While quantitative data (OECD DAC, QuODA) confirm ROK's superior alignment with international norms versus Japan's loan-centric economic infrastructure priority, the core of the divergence is ideational. Japan’s ODA ideology is founded on ‘self-help’ and explicitly seeks ‘national interest’ (2003 Charter), justifying its consistent deviation from DAC norms in favor of commercial and geopolitical returns. This shift was a political response to internal and external pressures post-Cold War.
      Conversely, ROK’s aid ideology is profoundly shaped by its unique history as the world’s first major recipient country to transition into a DAC donor. This narrative fuels a powerful domestic and international drive for institutional legitimation as an ‘advanced donor,’ resulting in the prioritization of universal international norms, as codified in the 2010 ‘Framework Act on International Development Cooperation.’ ROK's policy path is thus characterized by normative compliance, contrasting sharply with Japan's strategic mercantilism.
      The study concludes that Japan and ROK represent two distinct models, providing crucial policy implications. ASEAN can strategically navigate the complementary yet asymmetric nature of the aid—leveraging Japan for economic infrastructure and ROK for social development—to maximize its development outcomes.
      번역하기

      This study critically analyzes the Official Development Assistance (ODA) policies of Japan and the Republic of Korea (ROK) toward ASEAN (2010–2023). Challenging assumptions of aid homogeneity, the paper argues that the increasingly asymmetric ODA pa...

      This study critically analyzes the Official Development Assistance (ODA) policies of Japan and the Republic of Korea (ROK) toward ASEAN (2010–2023). Challenging assumptions of aid homogeneity, the paper argues that the increasingly asymmetric ODA patterns are deeply rooted in their distinct, historically constructed ‘aid ideas’. A quantitative and ideational- institutional framework is used to map these policy divergences.
      While quantitative data (OECD DAC, QuODA) confirm ROK's superior alignment with international norms versus Japan's loan-centric economic infrastructure priority, the core of the divergence is ideational. Japan’s ODA ideology is founded on ‘self-help’ and explicitly seeks ‘national interest’ (2003 Charter), justifying its consistent deviation from DAC norms in favor of commercial and geopolitical returns. This shift was a political response to internal and external pressures post-Cold War.
      Conversely, ROK’s aid ideology is profoundly shaped by its unique history as the world’s first major recipient country to transition into a DAC donor. This narrative fuels a powerful domestic and international drive for institutional legitimation as an ‘advanced donor,’ resulting in the prioritization of universal international norms, as codified in the 2010 ‘Framework Act on International Development Cooperation.’ ROK's policy path is thus characterized by normative compliance, contrasting sharply with Japan's strategic mercantilism.
      The study concludes that Japan and ROK represent two distinct models, providing crucial policy implications. ASEAN can strategically navigate the complementary yet asymmetric nature of the aid—leveraging Japan for economic infrastructure and ROK for social development—to maximize its development outcomes.

      더보기

      동일학술지(권/호) 다른 논문

      분석정보

      View

      상세정보조회

      0

      Usage

      원문다운로드

      0

      대출신청

      0

      복사신청

      0

      EDDS신청

      0

      동일 주제 내 활용도 TOP

      더보기

      주제

      연도별 연구동향

      연도별 활용동향

      연관논문

      연구자 네트워크맵

      공동연구자 (7)

      유사연구자 (20) 활용도상위20명

      이 자료와 함께 이용한 RISS 자료

      나만을 위한 추천자료

      해외이동버튼