International aid and institutional development in North Korea

17 May 2024 par Admin IAO
Séminaire
Mercredi 22 mai 2024, 14h-15h30
en salle de séminaire de l’IAO (D4.070)
et en distanciel sur inscription

Intervenante : Sabine Burghart, politologue, University Lecturer, Center for East Asian Studies, University of Turku, Finlande. She spent more than five years of her professional career in Korea, and facilitated various capacity building projects and three EU-DPRK workshops in North Korea.

Following the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK) government’s appeal for international assistance in 1995, a wide range of actors provided humanitarian and ‘light’ development assistance. The complex nature of a largely functioning but repressive state, limited capacities to deal with a protracted humanitarian crisis and the regime’s constant weighing of risks versus benefits shaped the space in which humanitarian projects were implemented. The decades-long interaction between the DPRK government and international aid actors has mainly been examined from the angle of institutional constraints such as strict state control, domestic regulations, restrictions of access to vulnerable groups and limited availability of data as well as international sanctions. While these factors continued to impact on the aid organisations’ activities, this presentation focuses on the institutional development and outcomes in the DPRK.

La présentation se fera en anglais et en français.