상세검색
최근 검색어 전체 삭제
다국어입력
즐겨찾기0
Journal of Safety and Crisis Management  Vol.12 No.8.jpg
KCI등재 학술저널

The Critical Review of the Discourse of North Korean Human Rights and International Anti-corruption: Focused on the Paradox of Human Rights and Sovereignty

The Critical Review of the Discourse of North Korean Human Rights and International Anti-corruption: Focused on the Paradox of Human Rights and Sovereignty

The corruption scandal of North Korea has seen by UN reports said the food and humanitarian aid being diverted to corrupt bureaucrat, whereby requesting to open an investigation. Given int'l inquiry, North Korea has responded by the paradox of human rights and sovereignty, which reflected human security and the principle of nonintervention. That is not, however, only North Korea's assertion in which some way analogous to a long-standing claim of the third world : the issue of North and South, and imperialism versus anti-colonialism. From the sense, the analysis has focused the normative issue of human rights and state sovereignty, and has explored the sphere of the notion in which North Korea engaged the Third World enquiring the justice of the core in line with anti-corruption regime's evolvement. Secondly, it evolved to show what attributes the paradoxical logic to North Korean regime's highly rigid political sense, namely sovereign priority.

Introduction

The Discourse of International Anti-corruption and North Korean Human Rights

The Possibility of Legitimizing the International Anti-corruption Notion and Its Universality Acquisition (A Quest for Consensus)

Anti-corruption Effectiveness from a Methodological Perspective: Issue of Power and Institutional Mechanism

Corruption in Foreign Aid and Interdependence

North Korea's Response to International Anticorruption Criticism

Concluding Remarks

References

로딩중