Interstate competition in the US South for South Korean auto investments: a US perspective

2016 ◽  
pp. 153-173
Author(s):  
Michael C. McDermott
Survival ◽  
1994 ◽  
Vol 36 (2) ◽  
pp. 78-91 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sang Hoon Park
Keyword(s):  
Us South ◽  

Significance It expands the peace process launched at the summit in April, including a military annexe with concrete measures to reduce border tensions. Kim also recommitted to denuclearisation, if in vague terms. Nonetheless, US President Donald Trump and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo praised the summit. Moon is to meet Trump in New York on September 25. Pompeo is seeking talks with North Korea’s foreign minister, Ri Yong-ho, who will attend the UN General Assembly. Impacts If Kim offers more on denuclearisation, Moon will press for some relaxation of sanctions to facilitate economic cooperation. If not, Washington may try to rein Moon in; that would strain the US-South Korean alliance, which is probably one of Kim’s aims. Pyongyang has repudiated or failed to implement past agreements, and could again if Kim feels US pressure is excessive.


2018 ◽  
Vol 52 (2) ◽  
pp. 390-417
Author(s):  
ELISABETH ENGEL

This article traces and analyzes the missionary photography of the African Methodist Episcopal Church (AME), the most important independent black American institution that began to operate in colonial South Africa at the onset of the politics of racial segregation in the 1890s. It argues that AME missionary photography presents a neglected archive, from which a history of black photographic encounters and a subaltern perspective on the dominant visual cultures of European imperialism and Christian missions in Africa can be retrieved. Focussing in particular on how AME missionaries deployed tropes of the culturally refined “New Negro” and the US South in their visual description of South Africa, this article demonstrates that photography was an important tool for black subjects to define their image beyond the representations of black inferiority that established visual traditions constructed.


2001 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 115-119 ◽  
Author(s):  
Franklin G. Mixon ◽  
Kamal P. Upadhyaya
Keyword(s):  
Us South ◽  

2021 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 25-40 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joy Brooke Fairfield ◽  
Krista Knight ◽  
Barry Brinegar

In the first autumn of the COVID-19 pandemic, long-time theatre collaborators in two different cities in the US South discuss the future of an art form that has currently gone dark. Influenced by punk culture, twenty-first-century internet aesthetics, social justice movements and their pets, this decade-strong creative team reflects in a multimedia format on their past work and enumerates their priorities for the future of musical theatre: cheap, remote, inexperienced, local, radical and full of women and sexual/gender minorities.


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