Though the joint statement from the Trump-Kim summit remains vague, the meeting could be an effective confidence-building measure in steps toward implementing a denuclearization agreement.
Se Young Jang is no longer with the Carnegie Endowment.
Se Young Jang was a nonresident scholar in the Nuclear Policy Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. A historian by training, her research interests include nuclear proliferation and nonproliferation, nuclear energy industry, East Asian security, U.S. foreign policy, two Koreas, and the Cold War.
She received her PhD in international history from the Graduate Institute Geneva in August 2017. She also holds a BA in political science and consumer studies and an MA in international relations from Seoul National University. Prior to starting her PhD studies, she was a South Korean foreign service officer working on issues related to WMD disarmament and nonproliferation, and she participated in the United Nations Program of Fellowships on Disarmament in 2009. In addition, she has been a research fellow and an associate at Harvard Kennedy School’s Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs, a nonresident James A. Kelly fellow in Korean Studies at the Pacific Forum CSIS, and a visiting scholar at the George Washington University’s Institute for Security and Conflict Studies under the Albert Gallatin Fellowship in International Affairs.
Her PhD dissertation, which analyzes a variety of nuclear dynamics behind U.S.–South Korean relations from 1945 to 1975, is currently being revised for a book manuscript. Her previous works have been published in the Journal of Strategic Studies, the National Interest, the Diplomat, Policy Forum, E-International Relations, the Washington Post, and the Woodrow Wilson Center’s Sources and Methods. Her chapter on the early history of South Korea’s nuclear energy industry has been also published in an edited volume, Economic Development and Environmental History in the Anthropocene: Perspective on Asia and Africa.
Though the joint statement from the Trump-Kim summit remains vague, the meeting could be an effective confidence-building measure in steps toward implementing a denuclearization agreement.
What was actually agreed at the inter-Korean Summit, and what are the roadblocks ahead? A closer look at what the Panmunjom Declaration means for the Korean Peninsula.
The upcoming Trump-Kim Summit was made possible through the efforts of South Korean officials led by President Moon. Further help from them will be crucial.
The rapidly changing security environment in Northeast Asia complicates any scholarly conjecture about the future of U.S. extended nuclear deterrence in the region.
The president’s unilateral nuclear authority comes from decisions made at the start of the Atomic Age.
South Korean President Moon Jae-in’s announcement that he would resume the construction of two nuclear reactors which had been temporarily halted since mid-July will have a more complicated effect on South Korea’s long-term energy policy.
Economic factors alone cannot explain the development of South Korea’s nuclear energy industry.
Pressure by the United States was less decisive in forcing South Korea to ratify the NPT in 1975 than commonly assumed.
Amid escalating tensions, South Koreans have begun voicing their concerns about a nuclear-armed North Korea-and debating bringing U.S. tactical nuclear weapons back to the Korean peninsula.