In this interview Korea Kontext speaks with Dr. Jennifer Lind, assistant professor at the Department of Government, Dartmouth College. Well known for her work on North Korea and N.E. Asia security issues, Lind’s research interests includes war memory and international politics, regime change and East Asian stability, and the evolution of nationalism. She’s also well known for a paper she wrote last year with Bruce Bennett of the Rand Foundation, which focused on what force requirements would be needed in the event of a benign collapse of the Pyongyang regime.
With her North Korea focus, in this episode we caught up with Dr. Lind about the DPRK government’s resilience and whether or not it will be possible for Kim Jong-un to make substantial reforms moving forward. If you enjoy the podcast, you may also be interested in reading an additional Q&A with her on the KEI blog website, on the subject of inter-state apologies in N.E. Asia.
Discussion with North Korean Defectors
Talking Trilateral: U.S.-South Korea-Japan Relations
President Moon Jae-In Takes Office in Seoul
Addressing Continuity in South Korean Foreign Policy
North Korea Sanctions: The View from South Korea
[Rebroadcast] Examining the Korean Economy
South Korea's Growing Role in Myanmar
Korean American Day 2017: Chemical Engineer Dr. Kook-wha Koh
An American Executive in a Korean Chaebol
The Chinese Perspective on THAAD
Can Information Really Pry Open North Korea?
New Silk Road? Korea in China's One Belt, One Road Initiative
[Rebroadcast] The Kim Monarchy: Reframing Political Legitimacy in North Korea
Documenting Human Rights in North Korea
The Tearful Reunion Myth: Exploring Challenges Korean Adoptees Face While Searching for Their Birth Families
Using Information to Reduce the North Korean Threat
Korean American Day 2017: Exploring Space with Dr. David Oh
U.S. Forces Korea: The Big Move to Camp Humphreys
2017 on the Korean Peninsula
Will UN Sanctions Finally Stop North Korea?
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