Korea Peace Day Special Panel Discussion
Shorenstein APARC, KSP Special Event
Date and Time
December 1, 2006
3:00 PM - 5:00 PM
Open to the public
No RSVP required
Speakers
John W. Lewis (panelist) - Stanford University
Bruce Cumings (panelist)
Jae Jung Suh (panelist)
Daniel C. Sneider (moderator) - Stanford University
Did North Korea really test the bomb? Wasn't the North Korean state supposed to collapse like the communist regimes in Warsaw, Bucharest, and East Berlin? How is it that the North Korean state survived the collapse of its Soviet trading partner, several years of extreme famine in the mid-1990s, and then the containment-plus tactics of the Bush administration? Now, are there really only "bad" and "worse" solutions to the "North Korea problem"?
To discuss these and related questions concerning Korea, East Asia, and U.S.-Korea relations, Stanford faculty and students are invited to a two hour town-hall type of meeting, hosted by the Shorenstein Asia Pacific Research Center (SAPARC) in collaboration with Alliance of Scholars Concerned about Korea (ASCK).
This important and timely conversation will begin with introductory remarks from four distinguished panelists: Bruce Cumings, University of Chicago, John Lewis, Stanford University, Jae Jung Suh, Cornell University. The program will be moderated by Dan Sneider, a long time journalist and columnist on Asian affairs.
Location
Philippines Conference Room
Encina Hall
616 Serra St., 3rd floor
Stanford University
Stanford, CA 94305
» Directions/Map
Parent Research Projects
Korean Studies Program (KSP)
Shorenstein APARC Program
Project on Peace and Cooperation in the Asian-Pacific Region
Project
Topics: Asia-Pacific | North Korea | Russia



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