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Course
Requirements
This is one
semester, three-credit course, which requires a mid-term assessment
test, one original research paper with innovative ideas and
arguments, one class presentation, and a final end semester
examination. The process of assessment also takes note of students’
presence in the class lectures, and their active & assertive
participation during the presentations.
Evaluation System
The evaluation of researcher’s performance is purely
judged on the basis of academic merit classified under the following
heads: 1) Participation, 2) Presentation, 3) Midterm; 4) Term-Paper
and 5) Final Examination
List of
Contents
To simplify and
systematize political economic developments in Korea, this course
have categorized list of contents under the following sub-titles
based on the major disjunctions in the political economic make-up of
the Korean peninsula. List of contents include:
1.
Political Economy of Aid and Reconstruction, 1945~1960
1.1
Korean Peninsula in the International Political Economy
1.2
U.S Aid and the Post-War Restructuring of Korean Economy
1.3
Korea’s Import-Substitution Industrialization (ISI) Strategy
2.
Political Economy of Growth: Promotion of National Capital,
1962~1997
2.1
Debates on Colonial Origins of Korea’s High Economic Growth Phase
2.2
Korea as a Case of Late-Late Industrialization
2.3
Rise of Developmental State and the Reformulation of State-Society
Relations
2.4
Paradigm Shift: Instituting Export-Promotion Industrialization (EPI)
Strategy
2.5
Nature of Korean Economic Growth: ‘High-Debt, High-Growth Model’
2.6
Korea’s Politics of Repressed Finance
2.7
Impact of Cold War on the Korean Political Economy
2.8
International Political Economy of Korean Economic Development
2.9
East Asian Developmental Model and Korea
3.0
Defining Korean Capitalism: Organizing from the Top
3.
Political Economy of Crisis: Intervention of Global Capital,
1997~1999
3.1 Debates on Korean Financial Crisis of
1997: Crony Capitalism vs. Mismanaged Financial System Reforms
3.2
Rolling Back of the State in Korea: Neo-Liberalism at Work
3.3
Debates on ‘Post-developmental State’
3.4
Redefining Korea’s Corporate Governance: Reform, Restructuring and
Rebound
3.5
Chaebol after the Reform
4.
Political Economy of Rebound: Promotion of Global Capital,
2000~Present
4.1
Korean Corporate Control and the Issues Related to Foreign Direct
Investment (FDI)
4.2
Promotion of Small & Medium Sized Enterprises: Rise of Venture
Capitalism in Korea
4.3
Political Economy of Post-Cold War: Korea’s Trade with China and
India
5.
Political Economy of Kim Il Sung Era, 1945~1994
5.1
Distinctiveness of North Korean Socialism
5.2
Freezing of the Consciousness: Juchae Ideology
5.3
Political Economy of North Korean Brinkmanship: Nuclear Question
5.4
Politics of Economic Crisis in North Korea
6.
Political Economy of Post-Kim, Il Sung Era, 1994~present
6.1
Debates on Transition Economies: Gradualism vs. Shock Therapy
Approach
6.2
Political Economy of Inter-Korean Economic Cooperation: ‘Sun Shine
Policy’ in Retrospect
For Further Reading
Books
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Amsden, Alice. 1989. Asia's Next
Giant. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press.
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Chang, Ha-Joon and Robert Rowthorn.
1995. The Role of the State in Economic Change. Oxford:
Clarendon Press.
-
Chang, Ha-Joon and Whittaker D.H.
2001. Financial Liberalization and Asian Crisis. Palgrave
Publishers.
-
Corbo, Vittorio &
Suh Sang-Mok (ed). 1992. Structural adjustment in a newly
industrialized country: the Korean experience. Baltimore:
Johns Hopkins University Press.
-
Choi, Kwan E., et
al., eds. 2003. North Korea in the World Economy, London:
RoutledgeCurzon.
-
Chung, Kui-Lae. 1997. The
Economic Influences on Korea's Democratic Development. New
York: East Asian Institute, Columbia University.
-
Cole, David C., and Young Chul Park.
1983. Financial Development in Korea, 1945-1978. Cambridge,
MA: Harvard University Press.
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Eckert, Carter J. 1992. Offspring
of Empire: The Koch'ang Kims and the Colonial Origins of Korean
Capitalism, 1876-1945. Seattle: University of Washington
Press.
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Evans, Peter, B. 1995. Embedded
Autonomy: States and Industrial Transformation. Princeton:
Princeton University Press.
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Fallows, James. 1994. Looking at
the Sun: The Rise of the New East Asian Economic and Political
System. New York: Pantheon Books.
-
Fields, Karl J. 1995. Enterprise
and the State in Korea and Taiwan. Ithaca: Cornell University
Press.
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Frederic C. Deyo, ed. 1987. The
Political Economy of New Asian Industrialism. Ithaca: Cornell
University Press.
-
Gerschenkron, Alexander. 1962.
Economic Backwardness in Historical Perspective. Cambridge,
MA: Harvard University Press.
-
Haggard, Stephan, David Kang and
Chung-in Moon. 1997. “Japanese Colonialism and Korean Development:
A Critique.” World Development, Vol. 25, No. 6.
-
Haggard, Stephan. 2000. The
Political Economy of the Asian Financial Crisis. Institute for
International Economics.
-
Jacobs, Norman.
1985. The Korean Road to Modernization and Development.
Urbana: University of Illinois Press.
-
Kim, Eun Mee.
1997. Big Business, Strong State: Collusion and Conflict in South
Korean Development, 1960-1990. Albany, NY: State University of New
York Press.
-
Koo, Hagen, ed.
1993. State and Society in Contemporary Korea. Ithaca, IL:
Cornell University Press.
-
Kwon, Huck-ju. 1999. The Welfare
State in Korea: The Politics of Legitimation. Houndmills:
Macmillan Press & New York: St. Martin's Press.
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Lee, Yeon-ho. 1997. The State,
Society and Big Business in South Korea. Routledge: London &
New York.
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Lee, Chong-sik
and Se-Hee Yoo. 1991. North Korea in Transition. Berkeley:
Institute of East Asian Studies.
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Lindauer, David L.
et al. 1997. The strains of economic growth: labor
unrest and social dissatisfaction in Korea. Cambridge: Harvard
Institute for International Development & Seoul: Korea Development
Institute.
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Macdonald, Donald
Stone. 1996. The Koreans: Contemporary Politics and Society.
Boulder: Westview Press.
-
Marcus Noland,
2000. Avoiding the Apocalypse (Washington, D.C.: Institute
for International Economics.
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Mason, Edward S.,
Mahn Je, Kim Dwight H. Perkins, Kwang Suk, Kim and David C. Cole.
1980. The Economic and Social Modernization of the Republic of
Korea. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
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Meredith, Woo-Cumings,
ed. 1999. The Developmental State. Ithaca and London:
Cornell University Press.
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Rowley, Chris &
Bae Johngseok. ed., 1998. Korean Business: Internal and
External Industrialization. London: Frank Cass.
-
Suh, Moon-Gi. 1998. Developmental
transformation in South Korea: from state-sponsored growth to the
quest for quality of life. Westport, Conn.: Praeger.
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Stern, Joseph J. et al. 1995.
Industrialization and the state: the Korean heavy and chemical
industry drive. Cambridge, MA.: Harvard Institute for
International Development & Seoul: Korea Development Institute.
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Steers, Richard M., Yoo Keun Shin &
Gerardo R. Ungson. 1989. The chaebol: Korea's new industrial
might. New York: Harper & Row.
-
Young Back Choi
et al. eds. 2001. Perspectives on Korean Unification, Cheltenham:
Edward Elgar.
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Wade, Robert. 1990. Governing the
Market: Economic Theory and the Role of Government in Taiwan’s
Industrialization. Princeton; rinceton University Press.
-
Woo, Jung-en. 1991. Race to the
Swift: State and Finance in Korean Industrialization. New
York: Columbia University Press.
Articles
-
Carlos, Diaz-Alejandro. 1985.
“Good-bye Financial Repression, Hello Financial Crash.” Journal
of Development Economics, 19 (September-October).
-
Chang, Ha-Joon and Richard Kozul-Wright.
1994. “Organizing Development: Comparing the National Systems of
Entrepreneurship in Sweden and South Korea.” Journal of
Development Studies, Vol. 30, No. 4.
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Choi, Byung-Sun.
1993. “Financial Policy and Big Business in Korea: The Perils of
Financial Regulation,” in Haggard, Stephan, Chung H. Lee and
Silvia Maxfield (eds.), The Politics of Finance in Developing
Countries. Ithaca: Cornell University press.
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Kohli, Atul. 1994.
“Where do high growth political economies come from?: The Japanese
Lineage of Korea’s Developmental State.” World Development,
Vol. 22, No. 9 (September).
-
Lee, C.H. 1992.
“The Government, Financial System, and Large Private Enterprises
in the Economic Development of South Korea.” World Development,
Vol. 20, No. 2.
-
Seong Hwan Cha.
2003. “Myth and Reality in the Discourse of Confucian Capitalism
in Korea,” Asian Survey, May/June, pp. 485-506
-
Timothy C. Lim.
2003. “Racing From the Bottom in South Korea,” Asian Survey,
May/June, pp. 423-442.
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