Invitation to event Oct. 21: North Korea's Shifting Political Landscape‏

اضيف الخبر في يوم الإثنين ٠٤ - أكتوبر - ٢٠١٠ ١٢:٠٠ صباحاً.


 

Please join us for a day-long conference:

 

North Korea's Shifting Political Landscape: Will Succession Provide Opportunities for Expanded Human Rights and Democracy in the Hermit Kingdom?

 

Thursday, October 21, 2010

9:00 a.m. - 6:00 p.m.

 

National Endowment for Democracy

1025 F Street NW, Suite 800

Washington, DC

 

RSVP by October 18 to rsvp@ned.org

 

On September 27, North Korea's government news agency announced the promotion of Kim Jong-il's third son, Kim Jong-un, to the rank offour-star military general, the clearest indication yet of North Korea's succession plans. The simultaneouselevation of Kim Jong-il's sister, Kim Kyoung-hui, to the same rank shows Kim's determination to keep power in the family, but the depth of support for the young, inexperienced Kim Jong-un, as well as the impact the succession will have on North Korea's abysmal human rights environment, is still unclear. How will political, social and economic life in the DPRK evolve? And will there be new opportunities to promote human rights and democracy? 

 

To better understand these challenges, NED, will join with the Sejong Institute and the Network for North Korean Democracy and Human Rights (NK Net) to convene a day-long discussion  featuring South Korean and western experts, as well as North Korean defectors and activists. The conference will include sessions on the DPRK's political environment and succession, the free flow of information into and out of North Korea, marketization and social change, and programmatic opportunities to promote democracy and human rights in one of the world's most closed countries. We hope you will join us for this timely discussion.

 

About the Sponsors:

 

The Network for Democracy and Human Rights in North Korea (NKnet) was founded in Seoul in 1999 by a group of citizens who wish to alleviate the suffering of the North Korean people and to promote human rights and democracy in North Korea.  The founders of NKnet are all veterans of the pro-democracy campaign against military dictatorship in South Korea.  NKnet is devoted to raising public awareness of the need to support democracy and human rights in North Korea. NKnet has made an important contribution to the North Korean human rights movement in South Korea, and has been an early mover and incubator of new ideas and initiatives, which have been adopted by many civil society organizations and NGOs working on North Korean human rights issues.

 

Established in 1983, the Sejong Institute is a private think tank in South Korea that is dedicated to conducting research and analysis on the past, present and future mid- and long-term national policies in the areas of security, national unification, and foreign affairs. As an affiliated organization of the Sejong Foundation, it has been active in developing policy alternatives for the promotion of security, peace, and prosperity on the Korean Peninsula, particularly in the area of political and economic reform in North Korea.

 

The National Endowment for Democracy (NED) was created in 1983 as a private, nonprofit, grant-making foundation with a mission to strengthen democratic institutions around the world through nongovernmental efforts.  NED makes more than twelve hundred grants each year to support prodemocracy groups in nearly 90 countries. The Endowment supports projects that promote political and economic freedom and participation, human rights, a strong civil society, independent media and the rule of law.

Conference Agenda
Thursday, October 21, 2010
 
8:30-9:00AM              Registration
 
9:00-9:30AM              Opening Ceremony
                                   
                                    Welcoming Remarks
Carl Gershman, President, NED
Sae Hee Yoo, Chairman, NKnet
Dae Sung Song, Director, Sejong Institute
Robert King (invited), US Special Envoy to North Korean Human Rights Issues
 
9:30-10:15AM           North Korea: Political Context
 
                                    Chair: Dae Sung Song, Director, Sejong Institute
 
Presenters:
1.       Young Hwan Kim, NKnet, "Possible Directions of the Human Rights and Democracy Movement with Leadership Succession in North Korea"
2.       Gyeong Seob Oh, Sejong Institute, "North Korea's Succession and Regime Building, and Suggestions for US and South Korean Policies Toward North Korea"
 
Discussants:
1.      Andrei Lankov, Kukmin University
2.      Scott Snyder, The Asia Foundation
 
                       
10:30-12:30PM         Free Flow of Information in North Korea
 
                                    Chair: Brian Joseph, Senior Director for Asia, NED
 
Presenters:
1.       Gwang Baek Lee, Radio Free Chosun, "Impact of Independent Radio Broadcasts in North Korea"
2.       Cheol Hwan Kang, Chosun Ilbo and North Korea Strategy Center, 'The Role of NK defectors in Free Flow of Information"
 
Discussants:
1.      Betsy Henderson, Radio Free Asia
2.      Robert Boynton, New York University
 
 
1:30-3:30PM              Marketization and Social Change in North Korea
 
                                    Chair: John Callebaut, Center for International
                             Private Enterprise     
 
                              Presenters:
1.      Ju Hyun Shin, Daily NK, "North Korea's Market Conditions and Social Transformation Since the Currency Reform"
2.       Hyeong Jung Park, Korea Institute for National Unification, "Analysis and Prospects of North Korea's Marketization: An Comparative Analysis with Former Socialist Regimes"
 
Discussants:
1.      John Park, US Institute of Peace
2.      Marcus Noland, Peterson Institute for International Economics
 
3:45-5:45PM              Programmatic Opportunities to Promote Democracy and
                         Human Rights in North Korea             
 
                              Chair and Discussant: Roberta Cohen, Non-resident fellow,
                             Brookings Institution
 
                              Presenters:
1.       Ki Hong Han, NKnet, "The Current State and Future Prospects of North Korean Democratization and Human Rights Movement"
2.       Ho Yeol Yu, Korea University, "The Role of South Korea in Improving North Korea's Human Rights and Democracy"
3.       Chuck Downs, Committee for NK Human Rights "Advancing Human Rights in the Closing Years of the Kim Jong-il's Regime"
4.       John Knaus, NED, "Promoting Human Rights and Democracy in North Korea:  The NED as a Case Study"
 
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