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BusinessWeek July 24, 2006 Ihlwan & Roberts |
Lifeline From China A visit to bustling Dandong shows why economic sanctions against North Korea may not work. |
BusinessWeek October 22, 2007 Roberts & Ihlwan |
North Korea's Warming Trend North Korea's sick economy may be on the mend as Chinese and South Korean businesses step up investment. |
TIME Asia June 28, 2010 Bill Powell |
Sixty Years and Counting South Korean Suh Se Jun has seen her two younger siblings just once in the past 60 years. |
Parameters Spring 2007 Andrew Scobell |
Notional North Korea Researching North Korea is not as difficult as one might think. Here is an assessment of new books about the country. |
BusinessWeek March 29, 2004 Moon Ihlwan |
Korea's China Play They're partners now. But in the future, China will dominate this powerful relationship |
Geotimes October 2005 Katie Donnelly |
A Denuclearized Korean Peninsula South Korea is not alone in having a different perspective than the United States about North Korea. Even though the other countries involved in the Six Party Talks have vested interests in a denuclearized Korean peninsula, each sees the problem of North Korea in a different light with different solutions. |
BusinessWeek July 25, 2005 |
Seoul Gives The North A Power Boost South Korea, in an effort to defuse the nuclear crisis with the north, has offered Pyongyang a vast supply of badly needed electricity. |
AskMen.com |
US general says US ready for North Korean attack The top U.S. military commander in Korea said Tuesday that U.S. and South Korean forces are prepared for "anything North Korea can throw at us." |
BusinessWeek March 20, 2006 Moon Ihlwan |
Hands Across The DMZ North Korea is home to a huge, cheap, and underemployed workforce. South Korea needs a low-wage manufacturing base to compete with China. The result is outsourced work for South Korean capitalists. |
BusinessWeek August 25, 2003 Stan Crock |
North Korea: Talking Is One Thing. Getting Somewhere Is Another Negotiations expected to begin in September involving North Korea, South Korea, China, Japan, Russia, and the U.S. are likely to be the most difficult and complex the Bush Administration has attempted so far. The Administration faces a host of dilemmas. |
BusinessWeek October 21, 2010 Michael Forsythe et al. |
In Pyongyang, the Dollar Commands Respect North Koreans have lost faith in their currency, as shown by the 10-to-1 gap between the official exchange rate and the unofficial one. |
The Motley Fool March 7, 2011 Tony Arsta |
South Korea: Don't Call It an "Emerging Market" Korea's no more an emerging market than Pittsburgh is a city on the Pacific. |
Real Travel Adventures July 2008 Antonio Graceffo |
On Learning the Difficult Korean Language Korea has one of the most unique languages in the world. The vocabulary is similar to Chinese, but the grammar is closer to Japanese. |
Military History Colonel Harry G. Summers, Jr. |
Korean War: A Fresh Perspective More than forty-five years after shipping out to fight in Korea, the author gains new insight into what the war had been all about. |
BusinessWeek July 26, 2004 Moon Ihlwan |
North Korea: Open For Business -- A Bit North Korea remains poor, but Kim Jong Il's reforms are bringing growth. |
Reason July 2003 Doug Bandow |
Cutting the Tripwire It's time for the U.S. to get out of Korea |
BusinessWeek November 24, 2003 Moon Ihlwan |
South Korea: Plugging Into Batteries In A Big Way Korean investments in plants and research threaten Japan's dominance. |
Sports Illustrated May 31, 2002 Grant Wahl |
Inside out Through the lens of the Miracle on Grass exploits of North Korea's 1966 World Cup team, a different North Korea emerges... |
BusinessWeek July 5, 2004 Crock, Ihlwan & Roberts |
Now It's Your Turn, North Korea U.S. proposal provides North Korea with security assurances from the U.S. and a resumption of heavy-fuel oil shipments from allies in return for progress by Pyongyang toward a "complete, verifiable, and irreversible" dismantling of the nuclear sites. |
Sports Illustrated June 24, 2002 Grant Wahl |
A love letter to Korea From here on out, you can call me an honorary Korean-American. This is my 32nd straight day in this country, and it's still providing no end of amazements. Not just on the soccer field, either, but in everyday life. |
The Motley Fool December 19, 2011 Alex Planes |
What Happens With North Korea Now? Few outcomes have been less certain for their effects on political and business conditions. |
TIME Asia November 15, 2010 Michael Schuman |
Asia's Latest Miracle Over the past decade, Korea has reinvented itself. It has become an innovator, an economy that doesn't just make stuff, but designs and develops products, infuses them with the latest technology, and then brands and markets them worldwide, with style and smarts. |
BusinessWeek March 1, 2004 Crock, Ihlwan, & Roberts |
Pyongyang: Will Its Recovery Speed A Deal? Contrary to many experts' opinions, economic reforms seem to be having an effect on North Korea. |
AskMen.com |
A Missile Strike On Hawaii? North Korea may fire a long-range ballistic missile toward Hawaii in early July, a Japanese news report said Thursday, as Russia and China urged the regime to return to international disarmament talks on its rogue nuclear program. |
BusinessWeek September 9, 2010 Campbell & Lim |
North Korea's Knack for Games Pays Off Software exports may help buttress a sagging economy. |
TIME Asia June 13, 2011 Jeffrey Wasserstrom |
Diplomatic Immunity? I was reminded of just how long the list of China's prediction-defying developments is when I visited a used-book store on the same day that I began reading Henry Kissinger's On China. |
BusinessWeek April 8, 2010 Moon Ihlwan |
How Korea Fretted Its Way to Success Years of worrying about being squeezed by China and Japan helped Seoul stand up to its rivals. Now it's obsessed with finding the Next Big Thing. |
BusinessWeek March 14, 2005 Moon Ihlwan |
Fund Frenzy Hits Korea Cleaned-up brokerages have won back retail investors' trust in Korea. |
Popular Mechanics February 2007 Simon Cooper |
North Korea's Biochemical Threat While its nuclear test spurs outrage, North Korea grows a vast biochemical weapons arsenal in secrecy. We investigate Kim Jong Il's deception, his country's human trials and the terror potential of this rogue nation's deadly harvest. |
The Motley Fool December 27, 2011 Rebecca Lipman |
What Happens if North Korea Disintegrates? South Korean Stocks to Watch The eight largest South Korean companies trading on the NYSE. |
Salon.com March 15, 2001 Jake Tapper |
Did Bush bungle relations with North Korea? "He said a really stupid thing. He shouldn't say stupid things in the future." |
BusinessWeek February 7, 2005 |
A Chilly Reception For Guest Workers in South Korea Will Korea relax limits on the foreign labor it so desperately needs? |
Real Travel Adventures December 2005 Antonio Graceffo |
On Learning the Awful Chinese Language You don't know how much you need to learn a new language until you live there. |
Military History January 2007 Ricardo Bonalume Neto |
A New Era in Aerial Warfare Began During the Korean War The first months of the Korean War saw a struggle for air superiority acted out by the fighters of the World War II vintage. Then the MiGs arrived, and a new era in aerial warfare began. |
Entrepreneur May 2005 Mark Henricks |
Eastern Influence Chinese companies are becoming increasingly active in buying, merging with and doing joint ventures with smaller U.S companies -- usually in search of technology. |
AskMen.com |
U.S. Journalists Pardoned North Korean leader Kim Jong Il has issued a "special pardon" to two American journalists convicted of sneaking into the country illegally, and he ordered them released during a visit by former U.S. President Bill Clinton, North Korean media reported early Wednesday. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics July 2005 John Rhea |
New terrorist challenge: North Korea It's a challenge the United States can ill afford to ignore. North Korea's WMDs are not illusory. Moreover, its missiles make Saddam Hussein's look puny by comparison. |
BusinessWeek May 16, 2005 Moon Ihlwan |
Why North Korea May Start Nuclear Testing North Korea's reclusive leader, Kim Jong Il, is back in the spotlight as he plays a dangerous survival game, threatening the world yet again with his nuclear arms program. |