5 research outputs found

    North Korea: Fading Totalitarianism in the "Hermit Kingdom"

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    North Korea is perceived by many as one of the most totalitarian societies of modern time. But in the wake of the economic collapse of the 1990s, North Korean totalitarianism has grappled with new conditions. This paper examines how the country’s totalitarian character has been upheld through the institutional changes instigated by the economic collapse and subsequent famine in the country. It strives to answer whether today’s North Korea should still be characterized as a totalitarian society, and, if not, what system then governs the country.North Korea; Totalitarianism; Authoritarianism; Institutional Change; Planned Economy; Social Control

    North Korea: Fading Totalitarianism in the "Hermit Kingdom"

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    When Sherlock Holmes Left Pyongyang: Surveillance And Social Control In North Korea, 1954–2021

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    This dissertation argues that surveillance and social control in North Korea was always more complex than often depicted, even in the decades preceding the famine of the 1990s and early 2000s. At the same time, disobedience and resistance among the grassroots population did not seriously threatened regime stability. This shows that disobedience and stability can and often do co-exist in society. While many historians have abandoned the term “totalitarianism”, this dissertation argues that the concept remains relevant and necessary to describe societies such as North Korea where the state aspires to total control over the lives of the population, even if it does not always succeed. Through interviews with approximately 40 individuals from North Korea, most of them with memories from before the famine of the 1990s, this dissertation shows that social control always suffered from serious inefficiencies, even in the 1960s, 70s and 80s, decades not sufficiently explored in historiography on everyday life in the country

    When Sherlock Holmes Left Pyongyang: Surveillance and Social Control in North Korea, 1954–2021

    Get PDF
    This dissertation argues that surveillance and social control in North Korea was always more complex than often depicted, even in the decades preceding the famine of the 1990s and early 2000s. At the same time, disobedience and resistance among the grassroots population did not seriously threatened regime stability. This shows that disobedience and stability can and often do co-exist in society. While many historians have abandoned the term “totalitarianism”, this dissertation argues that the concept remains relevant and necessary to describe societies such as North Korea where the state aspires to total control over the lives of the population, even if it does not always succeed. Through interviews with approximately 40 individuals from North Korea, most of them with memories from before the famine of the 1990s, this dissertation shows that social control always suffered from serious inefficiencies, even in the 1960s, 70s and 80s, decades not sufficiently explored in historiography on everyday life in the country
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