The Korea Times covers a forum where Government Professors Jennifer Lind and Daryl Press discuss how the outcome of the US presidential...
News
May 17, 2023
Professor Daryl Press was quoted in an extensive Harpers Magazine piece on the dangers of American hubris. Read the full article HERE!
April 19, 2023
In January, the U.S.–South Korean alliance was rocked by President Yoon Suk-yeol's surprising suggestion: his country, a law-abiding member...
December 23, 2022
It has been argued that South Korea's withdrawal from the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) and its own nuclear armament are legitimate...
July 20, 2022
"The possibility of an independent South Korean nuclear arsenal is not a popular direction within circles in Washington," Professor Press...
October 13, 2014
“A country’s credibility, at least during crises, is driven not by its past behavior but rather by its power and interests. If a country makes threats that it has the power to carry out—and an interest in doing so—those threats will be believed even if the country has bluffed in the past," says Associate Professor Daryl Press in an article on The Atlantic.
May 08, 2014
"Tragically, those countries that have fought wars to build a reputation for resolve have wasted vast sums of money and, much worse, thousands of lives," says Professor Daryl Press in an "Atlantic" story about U.S. foreign policy.