It's a MAD, Mad World: Prospects for Security, Diplomacy, and Peace on the Korean Peninsula
Shorenstein APARC, KSP Round Table
Date and Time
October 17, 2003
1:30 PM
Open to the public
No RSVP required
Panelists
Gi-Wook Shin (panelist) - Stanford University
Scott D. Sagan (panelist) - Stanford University
Allen S. Weiner (moderator) - Stanford University
North Korea claims to have produced enough plutonium to build half a dozen nuclear bombs. U.S. intelligence indicates North Korea may indeed possess one or two nuclear weapons. The North Korean government has overtly threatened to use their arsenal against the United States. How credible is the threat? Is North Korea becoming the next Iraq? The U.S., China, Japan, Russia, and South Korea are pushing for another six-party talk. Can diplomacy, international aid, and security guarantees curb North Korea's nuclear proliferation? Can we negotiate with a regime devoid of a rule of law? What are our other options?
Panel discussion moderated by Warren Christopher, Professor in the Practice of International Law and Diplomacy, Stanford Law School, and including:
A panel discussion featuring:
- Bernard S. Black, JD '82
- George E. Osborne, Professor of Law and Director of the LLM Program in Corporate Governance and Practice, Stanford Law School
- Mi-Hyung Kim, JD '89 General Counsel and Executive Vice President , Kumho Business Group
Location
Dinkelspiel Auditorium, Stanford Law School, Stanford University Campus
Neeley Main
Parent Research Projects
Topics: Business | Diplomacy | Governance | International Law | Rule of law | Rule of law and corruption | China | Iraq | Japan | North Korea | Russia | South Korea | United States



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