SYSTEMS THEORY AND SECURITY IN NORTHEAST ASIASYSTEMS THEORY AND SECURITY IN NORTHEAST ASIA
- Other Titles
- SYSTEMS THEORY AND SECURITY IN NORTHEAST ASIA
- Authors
- 임재천
- Issue Date
- 2009
- Publisher
- 연세대학교 국가관리연구원
- Keywords
- Systems theory; neorealism; security; polarity; Northeast Asia; 시스템이론; 신현실주의; 안보; 동북아
- Citation
- 통일연구, v.13, no.2, pp.63 - 98
- Journal Title
- 통일연구
- Volume
- 13
- Number
- 2
- Start Page
- 63
- End Page
- 98
- URI
- https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/121731
- ISSN
- 1598-8554
- Abstract
- This paper employs neorealist systems theory, particularly Kenneth N. Waltz’s, to analyze Northeast Asia’s current and future security concerns. It begins by studying the relationships between structures and states’ behaviors in international systems for developing a theoretical understanding of structural effects on units’ ideological salience within systems. States’ ideological characters do not clearly appear in amultipolar system because structure restrains their ideological salience. According to the author, in a multipolar international system, states’ characters do not play an important role in shaping individual states’ behaviors. A bipolar structure, however, increases the salience of states’ ideological characters more than a multipolar structure does, which critically affect their alliance formation. This paper also provides a historical review of Northeast Asia’s international political structures. The author argues that, regarding system stability, bipolarity was more stable than multipolarity in Northeast Asia. The paper assumes that the current international political structure is a unipolar one dominated by the United States and that a post-unipolar structure in Northeast Asiawould be multipolar. Through various scenarios, it addresses how this transformation of the international political structures would affect Northeast Asian security issues such as great power shifts, the
proliferation of nuclear weapons, North Korea’s survival as a state, United States’forces in Northeast Asia, Japan’s military normalization, China-Taiwan relations, and territorial disputes.
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Collections - College of Public Policy > Korean Unification, Diplomacy and Security in Division of Public Sociology and Korean
Unification/Diplomacy > 1. Journal Articles
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