WHA Annual Meeting: Korea 2026

Peter Bankseok Kwon

Professor Kwon is the author of Cornerstone of the Nation: The Defense Industry and the Building of Modern Korea under Park Chung Hee (Harvard University Asia Center, 2024), which examines the origins and development of South Korea’s defense industry during Park Chung Hee’s rule and its impact on the nation’s socio-economic and military transformation. As a Fulbright US Scholar in South Korea for the 2024-2025 academic year, he is currently working on his second book, Column of the Nation: The Yulgok Operation and South Korea’s Global Rise, which investigates the Yulgok Operation and its multifaceted role in South Korea’s national development trajectory.

Institutional Affiliation:

University at Albany, SUNY


Session

06-26
10:15
90min
South Korea and Its Struggle to Move Beyond the Cold War
Keiran Macrae, Kim Soo Jung, Seung Mo Kang, Peter Bankseok Kwon, Benjamin A. Engel

South and North Korea are states born out of the Cold War and their division was solidified by the Korean War. The realities of the global Cold War limited South Korea’s interactions with some peoples and shaped its understanding of friends and foes. Yet while most of the world rejoiced at the proposition of the “end of history” following the demolition of the Berlin Wall and the disintegration of the Soviet Union, South Korea has struggled to move on. Nearly seventy-five years after the Korean War began, South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol was still using the existence of “pro-North Korean” communists as justification for declaring martial law on December 3, 2024. Papers in this panel use the lens of the Cold War and its (supposed) end to shed light on various aspects of South Korea’s relations with and understandings of the world as well as itself. In many respects, the end of the Cold War opened space for South Korea to expand its horizons in terms of its ambitions and connections with countries previously obscured by the Iron and Bamboo Curtains. In other ways, consciously and unconsciously, the people and policymakers of South Korea struggled to move beyond the Cold War frame because of the North Korean threat or a reluctance to discard privileges the supposed North Korean threat provided them.

Room 208 (Seats 40)