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Space and Environment

City and Compost: Unraveling the Metabolic Relationship between Urban and Rural Areas in North Korea

Space and Environment / Space and Environment, (P)1225-6706; (E)2733-4295
2024, v.34 no.2, pp.142-182
https://doi.org/10.19097/kaser.2024.34.2.142

JIN-TAE HWANG

Abstract

This study examines the relationship between urban and rural areas in North Korea, drawing on environmental sociologist John Bellamy Foster’s theory of metabolic rift. Since adopting Kim Il-sung’s “Socialist Rural Theses” in 1964, North Korea has aimed to integrate urban and rural development through a system centered on the county (gun) level, promoting balanced growth between urban and rural regions. Thus, state policy emphasizes the transportation of materials from urban and industrial areas to support rural communities. This paper specifically explores the transportation of “urban manure (dosigeoreum)” as an example of urban support for rural areas during Kim Jong-un’s leadership, attempting to restore the metabolic rift between North Korean cities and rural areas. In conclusion, the transportation of urban manure represents an effort to create a sustainable cyclical relationship between urban and rural material flows, underscoring the critical role of the party and state in guiding this policy. However, when viewed within the broader context of North Korea’s domestic and international relations, this policy can also be seen as a defensive response to external pressures and sanctions, aimed at achieving self-reliance. Fundamentally, without addressing the structural constraints of the North Korean regime, attempts to restore the metabolic rift through urban manure transportation will inevitably face inherent limitations.

keywords
도시거름, 신진대사 균열론, 물질대사 순환, 도·농연계공간, 북한, Urban manure, Metabolic rift theory, Material metabolism cycling, Urban-rural inter-linkage space, North Korea

Space and Environment