Annotation The Unfinished War: Korea is a time-sensitive manuscript concerned with theKorea War and current North-South issues including the North Korea's nuclearweapons. The author:? lays out the history of American involvement in Korea before, during, and afterthe war;? provides cross-cultural perspectives and an account of the war unparalleled forits breadth and depth based on recently declassified documents, interviews, andother references;? discusses new developments, including South Korea's so-called "economicmiracle," President Bush's inclusion of North Korea inthe "axis of evil," and emerging prospects for war orpeace today; and? includes concrete, personal realities and anecdotesbased on the experiences of Koreans.
Having been involved in sorting out and studying Korean place names for 18 years, I feel regretful in my heart. The Hanja transcriptions of pure Korean place names, which were written in old maps and geography books, were organized according to how they sounded. At some point I realized that the Hanja transcriptions were distorted versions of the names that were really used. However, as I had to sort out so many names in a short period of time, I could not even think of fixing the issues and always felt regretful in a corner of my mind. Writing this book is my small struggle to relieve that regretful feeling, at least a little.
The authors believe that capitalism works best, but without an underlying moral foundation, it can easily slip into a dysfunctional economy when necessary conditions for capitalism do not exist. The authors measure the success and failure of government policies based on historical and factual evidence in each country. A policy failure in one country, however, does not necessarily indicate that the policy per se was wrong unless similar policies also failed in other countries. That is why cross-country comparison in Failed is useful. Understanding other countries is more important today than ever before because what happens in China, for example, impacts the the U.S. and the EU and vise versa with lightening speed. For the cause of a failure (success), the authors look into broader practices than economics. They also provide their personal insights drawn from their experience working for many years in the United States and several developing countries in Asia. A must read for ordinary citizens, business professionals, and students of economics, government, and social science, Failed sheds light on endless and often groundless arguments between conservatives and liberals concerning public policy with facts, figures and examples.
Thank you for visiting our website. Would you like to provide feedback on how we could improve your experience?
This site does not use any third party cookies with one exception — it uses cookies from Google to deliver its services and to analyze traffic.Learn More.