WIAS Visiting Researcher Seminar:” Great Power Competition and the Korean Peninsula” (5/20)
Abstract
Why did the flurry of summitry in the Trump years to denuclearize North Korea fall short? What is the crux of the Korean security problem? To understand peninsular security, I argue that a more holistic approach is warranted to unpack and piece together the many crosscutting and overlapping security dynamics in a cogent and coherent manner. In this article, I first argue that the Korean Peninsula should be understood as a security system writ large, comprising the United States, China, and the two Koreas as indispensable players ¬in all major issues pertaining to peninsular security. The second section introduces complex systems theory as an analytical approach that injects more sophistication and dynamic into the otherwise overly structural analysis typical of the field. The third and fourth sections reconstruct the unfolding of major events in terms of a positive feedback loop—namely, how great power realpolitik and North Korea’s provocations converged and ricocheted to cause the crisis in 2017, as well as a negative feedback loop in which triangular interactions both facilitated and obstructed US–North Korea wrangling. The conclusion offers some preliminary assessments of how things might play out in the future.
Speaker
YANG, Xiangfeng (Associate Professor, Department of Government & International Affairs, Lingnan University, Hong Kong SAR)
Date&Time
5月20日(水) 14:30–16:00 / May 20, 2026 (Wed.) 14:30 – 16:00
Venue
Room #315, Building #19, Waseda Campus, Waseda University
Prospected Audience
Students, Graduate students, Faculty members, Research members, General Participants
Language
English
Organizer
Waseda Institute for Advanced Study (WIAS)
Coordinator: TANAKA, Takahiko(Professor, Faculty of Political Science and Economics, School of Political Science and Economics)
Registration
Pre-registration not required.







