http://chineseinput.net/에서 pinyin(병음)방식으로 중국어를 변환할 수 있습니다.
변환된 중국어를 복사하여 사용하시면 됩니다.
STRUCTURE AND PATTERN IN NORTHEAST ASIAN INTERNATIONAL POLITICS
Moody,Jr., Peter R The Institute for Far Eastern Studies Kyungnam Uni 1987 ASIAN PERSPECTIVE Vol.11 No.2
In northeast Asia as elsewhere, what holds true for one time may not for another. In the 1950s east Asia was the crucible of the Cold War, the site of the major hostilities. The American policy pronouncements developing containment policy, such as the Truman doctrine, tended to be global in scope, but containment at its beginnings did not really seem to apply to Asia. The United States refused even to try to intervene in an effective way in the Chinese civil war and into the summer of 1950 was gradually feeling a way toward accepting the fact of a communist China. Yet it was in Korea and Vietnam that blood was really shed to enforce containment.
Chollima, the Thousand Li Flying Horse: Neo-traditionalism at Work in North Korea
Moody, Peter Graham 성균관대학교 동아시아학술원 2013 Sungkyun Journal of East Asian Studies Vol.13 No.2
This paper uses the lens of Neo-traditionalism to elucidate the largely unexplored political aspect of the Chollima (or Flying Horse) Movement of North Korea. With its widespread use of a mythical, speedy horse from China as a rallying cry to inspire workers, this late 1950s and early 1960s worker mobilization movement was above all a series of legitimacy-enhancing exercises and the primary means by which the North Korean regime preserved the hegemony of Kim Il Sung following the Korean War. The term Neo-traditionalism is reformulated to correspond with what the Chollima Movement involved namely, the excavation and systematic reproduction of some element of a culture's past, the framing of that traditional element or return to some form of traditional authority as progressive or modern, and the practice of making the reprocessed fragments of tradition a pervasive and permanent part of modern culture
Michael Moody 한국행정학회 2009 International Review of Public Administration Vol.13 No.-
This paper examines how a variety of stakeholders and agency officials involved in collaborative governance and policymaking for California’s Bay-Delta water system understand and express the meanings, features, and benefits of collaboration. California’s water supply system is essential to the large, heavily populated state. It is centered on the “Bay-Delta” estuary, the primary source of urban and agricultural water that is now recognized as an endangered ecosystem. Data from a multi-year and multi-method qualitative research project were used to identify the repertoire of meanings of “collaboration” held by diverse participants, across settings and over time. Participants shared many core understandings of collaboration, including a strongly positive view and a pragmatic justification of collaboration as the best way to achieve workable, consensus-based solutions to Bay-Delta problems. Participants also considered “getting everyone at the table” as key to collaboration, and saw collaboration as creating familiarity, trusting relationships, and shared understandings that had practical benefits.