eastAsian Policy
1) Clinton Administration
The end of cold war made US to have more interest in NortheastAsia. During the cold war period, US held up the strategy of ‘containment and deterrence’ toward the Communist bloc and took their national security interest seriously. But after the end of cold war, they mapped out the ‘Strategy of Engagement’ and Enlargement to communist countri
China throughout its history.
In the socialist era, the cultural life of Vietnam has been deeply influenced by government-controlled media and the cultural influences of socialist programs. For many decades, foreign cultural influences were shunned and emphasis placed on appreciating and sharing the culture of communist nations such as the Soviet Union, China, Cuba and others. Since the 1990s
1. Introduction
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) is no longer a purely international economic organizationin the way it was. At first, the IMF was established along with the World Bank and theGeneral Agreement on Tariffs and Tradeat the close ofWorld War II in order to provide governments with balance of payments support, but now there’s a doubt that IMF has become a political organizat
Corruption is an important negative factor in economic development in many states. Corruption centers on the government as the central actor in economic development, especially in its international aspects. Through foreign policy, the government mediates the national economy’s relationship to the world economy.
Corruption is by no means limited to the global South. Bur for several reasons, c
The Roles of Korea
1. The bridge between China and Japan
Before the forming of EAEC in the region, it is crucial for China and Japan to cooperate first. However it is also impossible for them to make their own voices all the time and insist their own taste on the process of cooperation in this current situation. That is way they are so crazy about making Korea stand for one of their side to