Kim Jong-il's Leadership of North KoreaRoutledge, 2008年11月24日 - 240 頁 Kim Jong Il came to power after the death of his father Kim Il Sung in 1994. Contrary to expectations, he has succeeded in maintaining enough political stability to remain in power. Kim Jong Il's Leadership of North Korea is an examination of how political power has been developed, transmitted from father to son, and now operates in North Korea Using a variety of original North Korean sources as well as South Korean materials Jae-Cheon Lim pieces together the ostensibly contradictory and inconsistent facts into a conceptual coherent framework. This book considers Kim and his leadership through an analytical framework. composed of four main elements: i) Kim as a leader of a totalitarian society; ii) as a politician; iii) as a Korean; and iv) as an individual person. This illuminating account of what constitutes power and how it is used makes an important contribution to the understanding of an opaque and difficult regime. It will be of interest for upper level undergraduate, postgraduates and academics interested in North Korean politics, and also those in Political theory. |
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... party, and ending in February 1974, when the junior Kim was officially (but secretly) appointedasuccessor to the senior Kim. This period waspreparatory tohis becoming the successor. It examines whatthe NorthKorean leadership wantedhim ...
... Party. In October 1980, at the time of the Sixth Party Congress, Kim Jong Il was publicly exposed to the North Korean media as the heir. After the Sixth Congress, North Korea strengthened the personality cult of the successor. The ...
... Party, known as the North Korean Communist Party. The bureau independently conducted its activitieseven thoughit was nominallyunder the leadershipof the KoreanCommunist Party. Kim became thefirst secretary of the bureau on 18 December ...
... Party merged with the New Democratic Party to become the North Korean Workers' Party. IntheSouth, the South Korean Workers' Party was forged from acoalition ofthe Korean Communist Party, theNew Democratic Party,andthe People' s Partyin ...
... Party,about how to reorganize the party shattered by the war. According to Dae Sook Suh,Hǒ insisted thatthe Korean Workers' Party be an elite party byrestricting its membership like the BolshevikPartydid in the SovietUnion. Kim,however ...