Abstract

The article examines those domestic and external factors which led to the collapse of the Romanian and Albanian Communist regimes in 1989-1990 and which enabled the DPRK to survive the shock effect of the East European transitions and the subsequent economic crisis. It compares the three countries in terms of three dimensions: socioeconomic, symbolic, and international. It concludes that North Korea’s survival resulted from the combination of multiple factors which distinguished the country from both Nicolae Ceaus,escu’s Romania and Ramiz Alia’s Albania (though less so from Enver Hoxha’s Albania): the regime’s unusually repressive nature; the low cohesion of the underprivileged social groups; the leadership’s unwillingness to initiate either a political liberalization or a confrontational austerity program; the scarcity of alternative national symbols that could have been juxtaposed to the state’s own symbols; the absence of an earlier, non-Communist nation-state; China’s post-1991 support; North Korea’s strong military capabilities; the U.S. and South Korean governments’ focus on North Korea’s denuclearization, rather than democratization; and the North Korean elite’s fear of a scenario in which a transition would lead to the DPRK’s absorption into the ROK. The article also explains why Romania’s transition was more violent than Albania’s.

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