North Korea, international law and the dual crises : narrative and constructive engagement / Morse Tan.
2015
KPC2460 .T36 2015 (Map It)
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Details
Author
Title
North Korea, international law and the dual crises : narrative and constructive engagement / Morse Tan.
Published
Abingdon, Oxon [UK] ; New York, NY : Routledge, 2015.
Call Number
KPC2460 .T36 2015
Former Call Number
Kor.P 908.5 T153 2015
ISBN
9780415830621 hardcover
0415830621 hardcover
9780203381625 electronic book
0203381629 electronic book
0415830621 hardcover
9780203381625 electronic book
0203381629 electronic book
Description
xvi, 296 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
System Control No.
(OCoLC)892213231
Summary
"This utilizes a unique international law perspective to examine the actions and inactions of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) in regard to international security and human rights concerns in North Korea. The book will demonstrate how the two issues of nuclear weapons and the human rights abuses in North Korea are interconnected and why the international community should be applying the same international law framework to each to find a solution for both. The book analyses the North Korea's nuclear weapons situation from political, military, historical and legal angles examining the DPRK's policy objectives involving international security and Korean unification. The book goes on to explore the human rights abuses inflicted on the North Korean people by their own government and which include extermination, torture, and crimes of association, as well as collective retribution inside and outside its system of concentration camps. The book investigates the North Korean situation with a view towards redress through an international framework. North Korea's gross and systematic violations of human rights and defiant military actions through specific violations of international law are assessed including the contravention of the treaties that North Korea itself has ratified, to provide a proper foundation for redressing these international crimes through a tribunal. The specific objectives and actions of the North Korean government are analyzed according to applicable treaty law, jus cogens norms, customary international law, and other types of international legal obligations. It pinpoints the sources and underpinnings of the regional nuclear crisis and offer solutions for dealing with international security surrounding the Korean Peninsula. The book puts forward a proposal for the creation of a tribunal to prosecute those at the top of the regime for international crimes and human rights abuses after a reunification of the peninsula"-- Provided by publisher.
"The Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) has a reputation as one of the worst human rights situations in the world. This book utilizes a unique international law perspective to examine the actions and inactions of North Korea with regard to international security and human rights. Adopting political, military, historical and legal perspectives, the book explores how the two issues of nuclear weapons and the human rights abuses in North Korea are interconnected, and why the international community should apply the same international law framework to find a solution for both. Drawing on eyewitness accounts, such as refugee and defector testimony, Morse Tan offers a real-life story of North Korea that covers the pertinent law, and constructive approaches of its regime. Tan examines the specific objectives and actions of the North Korean government, and measures these according to international legal obligations such as applicable treaty law, jus cogens norms, and customary international law. The book concludes by offering solutions for dealing with international security surrounding the Korean Peninsula, and forwards a proposal for the creation of a tribunal to prosecute those at the top of the regime for international crimes and human rights abuses. As a project exploring the extremes of international law violation, this book will be of great interest and use to readers interested in the history, and political and legal implications of the strategies employed by the North Korea government"-- Provided by publisher.
"The Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) has a reputation as one of the worst human rights situations in the world. This book utilizes a unique international law perspective to examine the actions and inactions of North Korea with regard to international security and human rights. Adopting political, military, historical and legal perspectives, the book explores how the two issues of nuclear weapons and the human rights abuses in North Korea are interconnected, and why the international community should apply the same international law framework to find a solution for both. Drawing on eyewitness accounts, such as refugee and defector testimony, Morse Tan offers a real-life story of North Korea that covers the pertinent law, and constructive approaches of its regime. Tan examines the specific objectives and actions of the North Korean government, and measures these according to international legal obligations such as applicable treaty law, jus cogens norms, and customary international law. The book concludes by offering solutions for dealing with international security surrounding the Korean Peninsula, and forwards a proposal for the creation of a tribunal to prosecute those at the top of the regime for international crimes and human rights abuses. As a project exploring the extremes of international law violation, this book will be of great interest and use to readers interested in the history, and political and legal implications of the strategies employed by the North Korea government"-- Provided by publisher.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Record Appears in
Table of Contents
Preface
ix
Foreword
xiii
Acknowledgments
xvii
Introduction
1
Section One
The story of a criminal regime
9
1.
War, incursions, and provocations
11
2.
Multiple menaces, including cyber-nuclear
26
3.
Hell's doorstep
37
4.
The perils and hardships of refugees
54
5.
Jerusalem of the East no more
66
6.
The China--North Korea connection
79
7.
Iron fists in a fog
90
Section Two
Dissecting the crimes
99
8.
The war that has not ended
103
9.
Nuclear defiance
127
10.
Prosecuting Hell's doorstep
139
11.
The plight of those in flight
150
12.
Provisions for religious liberty
167
Section Three
Constructive approaches and solutions
175
13.
Judicial justice
177
14.
Diplomacy with a criminal regime
209
15.
China's potential to solve the puzzle
225
16.
U.S. and U.N. remedial actions
243
17.
International humanitarian intervention and the responsibility to protect
250
18.
Sundry solutions and constructive approaches
261
19.
Conclusion
265
Appendix I
North Korean Human Rights Bill
267
Appendix II
Organizations addressing the North Korea crisis
278
Appendix III
National Law Journal article
283
Appendix IV
UPI Asia article
286
Appendix V
Satellite images of North Korea
288
Index
292