David C. Kang Explained

David C. Kang
Birth Date:17 January 1965
Office:Maria Crutcher Professor in International Relations, Business and East Asian Languages and Cultures
Module:
Child:yes
Hangul:강찬웅
Hanja:康燦雄
Rr:Gang Chanung
Mr:Kang Ch'an Ung

David Chan-oong Kang (born January 17, 1965)[1] is a Korean American political scientist.

Born to a family of the Sincheon Kang clan, he holds a bachelor's degree in Anthropology and International Politics from Stanford University from 1988 and a doctorate in Political Science from the University of California, Berkeley, 1995. Since 2009, Kang has been a professor of the University of Southern California, where he is a professor in both international politics and organization and management. He leads the Institute for Korean Studies at the same university. Kang has previously been a professor at Dartmouth College and guest professor at Stanford University, Yale University, Seoul National University, Korea University and Université de Genève.[2]

Research

In his publication of They Think They’re Normal : Enduring Questions and New Research on North Korea - A Review Essay, David C. Kang talks about North Korea’s foreign and domestic policy, North Korea’s behavioral motivation, and lastly, to what extent North Korea’s behavior predictable or not. He uses three scholarly works of Patrick McEachern, Stephan Haggard and Marcus Noland, and Suk-Young Kim to fundamentally understand North Korea’s way of survival as a communist regime and their future endeavors.

Literature

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: Kang, David C. (David Chan-oong), 1965- . . https://archive.today/20200526165053/http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n2001055911.html . 2020-05-26 .
  2. Web site: David C. Kang . . 2018-11-21 . 2020-02-11 . https://archive.today/20200211143512/https://dornsife.usc.edu/ksi/david-kang/.