North Korea: domestic developments during Kim Jong-Un’s first year in power - Commons Library Standard Note

Published 01 March 2013 | Standard notes SN06566

Authors: Jon Lunn

Topic: Asia, Human rights, International economic relations, International politics and government

This note briefly surveys domestic developments in North Korea since the death of Kim Jong-Il in December 2011 and the succession of his son, Kim Jong-Un. The nuclear issue is referred to only in passing. The note comes with the usual health warning about North Korea – as one expert, Andrei Lankov, said recently: “Frankly, most of the time we are entirely ignorant, and a very large part of what is reported in the media is based on unreliable hearsay.” He went on to say that nowhere is this truer than in the sphere of ‘high politics’, including leadership-level manoeuvring.

See also Standard Note SN06536, “In brief: North Korea and the nuclear issue one year on since the succession” (28 January 2013)

For previous House of Commons Library briefings on North Korea see: North Korea’s dynastic succession, (SN06173, 3 January 2012); North Korea: An Update (SN05915, 24 March 2011); North Korea: Recent Developments (SN05096, June 2009); North Korea: The Nuclear Issue and Prospects for Change (RP 07/03, January 2007)

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