After the closure of the Kaesong Industrial Complex last year, economic ties between North and South Korea have all but ceased. And as sanctions measures continue to tighten, the international community has chosen to keep exerting greater and greater pressure on the regime in Pyongyang.
Amid tensions on the peninsula, this week's guest sees an opportunity for more "smart" sanctions, those targeted directly at the inner circles of the regime that are less likely to harm the average North Korean. In this episode, Kim Joong-ho, a Researcher at the Export-Import Bank of Korea, shares his thoughts on sanctions from the South Korean perspective, and looks ahead to the possible policies of the new administration that will soon be in place in Seoul.
Tracking Korea's Transportation System with Kojects
Addressing Inequality and Inefficiency in the Korean Labor Market
President Donald Trump and His Impact on Korea
[Rebroadcast] Escaping North Korea - Mike Kim
A Primer on Samsung's Galaxy Note 7 Crisis
A Look into Korean Literature
Flooding in North Korea: Humanitarian and Human Rights Concerns
Middlebury Says Annyeonghaseyo to its School of Korean
A Look at the Peninsula from the Next Generation of Korea Scholars
Economic Cooperation Between South Korea, Japan and the United States
[Rebroadcast] Korea’s English-Language Media: A Discussion with the President of Arirang TV
High-Level Defections and the North Korean Regime
Shamans, Goblins, and Ghosts: A Look at Korean Folk Culture
Marriage Migrants and Multicultural Families in South Korea
The Battle over THAAD
Election 2016: Party Politics and Their Implications for Korea
Korean Diaspora in Central Asia
South Korea's Outreach to the Middle East
[Rebroadcast] UK Ambassador to North Korea John Everard
Can Sanctions Force Change in North Korea?
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