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[Yoo Choon-sik] Factories of the future: Lee’s vision beyond AI
South Korea has long prided itself on being one of the few nations capable of fully leveraging the potential of artificial intelligence innovation. This national confidence is rooted in the country’s remarkable transformation from economic crisis to technological leadership ― a journey that began in earnest during the aftermath of the Asian financial crisis in the late 1990s. That legacy, however, now faces a new test. Recent independent studies have raised alarms that South Korea may be slippin
July 21, 2025 -
[Lee Byung-jong] Time for Korea’s brain gain
There was a time when South Korean scientists and engineers left their country in droves, seeking better research environments and more rewarding careers abroad —especially in the United States. For decades, this outflow of talent, often referred to as brain drain, was seen as a symptom of Korea’s limited scientific infrastructure and rigid institutional culture. But today, the situation is changing. South Korea has emerged as a serious player in research and development, and its universities an
July 18, 2025 -
[Wang Son-taek] Making the liberal international order 2.0
The World Congress of the International Political Science Association in Seoul, often dubbed the “Olympics of Politics,” could not have been more timely. With over 3,500 scholars from around 80 countries in attendance, the congress revolved around the theme “Resisting Autocratization in Polarized Societies.” This theme captured the world’s most pressing concern: the global erosion of democracy. South Korea — regarded as a democratic success story — experienced a severe political crisis from late
July 17, 2025 -
Winter has come
As we head into the second half of 2025, I wanted to share some scattered thoughts on the chilly state of the industry. A favorite parlor game these days is asking at every social gathering, “What are you watching?” Quickly followed by, “When was the last time you went to the theater?” The results, while more empirical than scientific, are alarming. Of the twenty non-industry folks I’ve asked over the past few weeks, exactly zero have stepped into a movie theater in 2025. Some haven’t gone in ov
July 16, 2025 -
[Hal Brands] A new chapter in US foreign policy
Nearly six months into Donald Trump’s presidency, a Trump Doctrine is coming into view. Contrary to the fears of his critics, and the hopes of some admirers, Trump is no isolationist. And contrary to those who claim Trump is simply a marvel of ac hoc-ery and inconsistency, there is a distinctive pattern to the policies he has pursued. This Trump Doctrine emphasizes using American power aggressively — more aggressively than Trump’s immediate predecessors — to reshape key relationships and accrue
July 16, 2025 -
[Kim Seong-kon] Standing before the sign, “not a through street”
When I lived in New York a long time ago, I frequently saw street signs marked “dead end” here and there. While I stayed in Provo, Utah, for one year, I saw “cul-de-sac” road signs before dead-end alleys. Now I am living in Hanover, New Hampshire, where I frequently see another sign: “not a through street.” “Dead end” sounds intimidating because it implies that there is no way out and you are stuck there. Naturally, you are likely to be frustrated, dismayed and may even despair when you reach a
July 16, 2025 -
[Alex Hinton] Trump’s America Is a tinderbox
“Bomb threat! You need to exit — now,” a security officer shouted at me as I observed the Principles First conference, a gathering of moderate Republicans in Washington, on Feb. 22. Moments later, we learned that the threat had come from an untraceable email claiming that four pipe bombs had been planted “to honor the J6 hostages recently released by Emperor Trump.” Sadly, I wasn’t surprised. Just days earlier, former Proud Boys leader Enrique Tarrio and other insurrectionists pardoned by Presid
July 15, 2025 -
[Grace Kao] Andrew Choi as Jinu in 'KPop Demon Hunters'
BTS, Stray Kids, Ateez and now Saja Boys. These are the only K-pop boy bands that have made it to the US Billboard Hot 100. However, Saja Boys is a fictional K-pop boy band composed of Korean demons ("joseung saja" or Korean grim reapers) from the animated Netflix film, “KPop Demon Hunters.” It is currently No. 1 on Netflix in the US, and has been in the Top 10 Netflix films in 93 countries. In addition, seven of its songs are on the July 12 US Billboard Hot 100 Chart. The fictional girl group i
July 15, 2025 -
[Lee Kyong-hee] Dr. Oh’s surgical tool bags in Pyongyang
As the Lee Jae Myung administration’s North Korea policy stirred expectations of detente and potential geopolitical tremors, an obituary in a newspaper caught my eye last month. Dr. Oh Indong, a well-known Korean American orthopedic surgeon and unification activist, passed away on June 19 at his Pasadena, California, home at age 86. Oh enjoyed international acclaim for his expertise in artificial hip joint replacement. A former Harvard Medical School faculty member, he invented major improvement
July 14, 2025 -
[Koichi Hamada] How to negotiate with Trump
Since Donald Trump returned to the White House in January, it has been virtually impossible to keep up with all the extreme measures, incendiary rhetoric, personnel changes, policy reversals, and breaches of rules and norms. That is by design: Like European fascists in the 20th century, Trump knows that it is far easier to manipulate and suppress an overwhelmed, divided, and disoriented public than an informed, engaged and assured one. The relentless stream of declarations, policy U-turns, and l
July 14, 2025 -
[Robert J. Fouser] Misguided university reform plan
Over the past several weeks, talk of a promise from President Lee Jae Myung to “create 10 universities on par with Seoul National University” has stirred debate. The plan has its origins in a book by Kim Jong-young, a professor at Kyung Hee University, published in 2021. The plan aims at investing heavily in nine regional national universities to raise their “level” to close to Seoul National University. The impetus for the plan comes from a broader push to promote balanced regional development.
July 11, 2025 -
[Wang Son-taek] July: A defining month for Korea-US alliance
The world is bracing for another tariff storm from US President Donald Trump. Delayed initially to take effect on July 9, the new tariff regime has now been postponed again until August 1, giving countries a few more weeks to negotiate. The delay was not a gesture of goodwill but a tactical maneuver. Trump's initial negotiation timeline was unrealistically short, virtually guaranteeing failure. Yet after the bruising experience of the first round, almost no country can claim to be caught off gua
July 10, 2025 -
[Rumman Chowdhury] Sovereign AI: A new frontier of national ambition
Should AI be a public good, shaped by local values, or a technology controlled by a handful of geographically-limited tech giants? The rise of “sovereign AI” -- locally developed, government-backed artificial intelligence systems -- reflects a world wrestling with the urgent questions of power, autonomy, and identity in the digital age. This push is not merely about technological prowess; it is a response to deep geopolitical anxieties, economic ambitions, and cultural imperatives. The geopoliti
July 10, 2025 -
[Noah Feldman] The Supreme Court’s majority is playing the long game
Many legal commentators apparently believe that, in the term that just ended, the Supreme Court further enabled President Donald Trump. The court did, in fact, issue a series of conservative decisions that Trump likes. However, under the leadership of Chief Justice John Roberts, the court also simultaneously pursued a careful strategy aimed at preserving the rule of law in the face of Trump’s unprecedented challenges to it. The court picked its battles, upholding a meaningful number of lower cou
July 9, 2025 -
[Kim Seong-kon] S.W.A.T.: 'South Korean Weapons and Tactics'
Whenever I want to relax these days, I turn on the TV and watch a Netflix series titled "S.W.A.T." In its depiction of daily incidents in urban LA, the drama makes me brood over our turbulent past, ponder our present predicaments and reflect on the future awaiting our children’s generation. The protagonist Hondo, a SWAT unit leader in LA, constantly wonders: “Is it possible for me to bring change to the world in which I live? Can I make a better society by risking my life fighting vicious villai
July 9, 2025