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DPRK-Soviet Relations

Soviet-DPRK Relations: Purges, Power, and Dissent in North Korea’s Formative Years

By Andrei Lankov | March 29, 2013

Andrei Lankov looks back to show how Soviet-DPRK relations and Kim Il-sung’s rule were guided not by ideology but by the demands of good old-fashioned power.

A False Dichotomy: Professor Andrei Lankov on a Popular Revolution Imposed from Without

By Andrei Lankov | February 18, 2013

In the first of his exclusive occasional posts for SinoNK, Professor Andrei Lankov of Kookmin University in Seoul explains how the North Korean revolution was both imposed by the USSR and supported by a substantial proportion of the North Korean people.

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  • Welfare Nationalism in Divided Societies

  • Weak Parties Are No Problem for South Korean Partisans

  • Debates and Sentiment toward the National Security Act in South Korea 

  • Experimental Method Reveals True South Korean Unification Preferences

  • Chinese Intellectuals, the CIA, and Defector Memoirs in the 1960s

  • Red Lines, Taiwan, and the UK Foreign Secretary Visit to Beijing

  • ROK Nat’l Assembly Speaker in Turkmenistan

  • North Korea, China pose rising cyber threat to South Korea: ROK Spy Agency

  • China’s Ground Game in Dandong and North Korea

  • Discovering Patriotic History near China’s Korean Border

  • Yongusil 102: Borderland Readings of Note

  • The Manchurian Myth: History and Power in North Korea

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