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[지역] Romania and the Commonwealth at the Black Sea

중동부유럽 기타 국내연구자료 학술논문 박정오 동유럽발칸연구 발간일 : 2012-10-31 등록일 : 2017-11-17 원문링크

The Black Sea Economic Cooperation was created on the 25th of June 1992 at the 1990 initiative of the former Turkish President, Turgut Özal, by signing the symbolic “Declaration on Black Sea Economic Cooperation” and the “Bosphorus Statement.” for the Euro‐Asian city of Istanbul along with the initial participation of 11 countries from the following regions: Albania, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Bulgaria, Georgia, Greece, Moldova, Romania, Russia (USSR agreed in 1990 to take part in the initiative, alongside Romania and Bulgaria), Turkey, and Ukraine (Serbia joined later). The BSEC stands as a viable alternative for the sterile and tragic conflicts. The organization has a number of partners that are divided into three major areas: Observers, Sectoral Dialogue Partners (Republic of Korea being a member of this section), and International Organizations. On November 26, 2010, the 23rd Foreign Ministers’ Meeting of the Black Sea Economic Cooperation (BSEC) was held in Greece, Thessaloniki. The BSEC Ministers agreed on Korea joining the Sectoral Dialogue Partner (SDP). This allowed South Korea to expand much more easily into the Black Sea region. However, this is a time when a strategic approach is needed. This kind of an approach can be found in the strategy of the United States when it had tried to expand into Eastern Europe. Specifically, in the early '90s, the United States supported Poland and Hungary intensively through the second Marshall Plan (assistance program for the democratization of Eastern Europe, also known as the Brady Plan) in order to strengthen its influence in Eastern Europe. The essential path of communication for Korea in this area rests with its own identity. There is a fundamental resemblance in the Korean way of seeing its own identity, of all, of the anonymous had workers building the nation’s top economic successes and the ones around the Black Sea shore, particularly Romania and Turkey. To connect with these simple values that are engraved in their cultures would mean to understand the diverse forms in which they are manifested or can manifest in the future. The main key of economic success in today’s world is accepting each one’s diversity, to be ready to listen to its rhythm from the confident positions of one’s own rhythm. Korea has an educational advantage when it comes to valorizing the human potential. The investment in foreign languages, such as that of Hankuk University of Foreign Studies, should continue. There is no better gate to good communication then knowing how to use the alphabet. The alphabet of a foreign language opens the door for the alphabet of an identity. This opening is the basic step to ensure a possible future success.

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