Citations:Ryanggang

English citations of Ryanggang

  • 1956 April 23, Kim Il Sung, “Report of the Central Committee of the Workers' Party of Korea to the Third Congress”, in Third Congress of the Workers' Party of Korea: Documents and Materials[1], Pyongyang: Foreign Languages Publishing House, →OCLC, page 46:
    In the period of the First Five-Year Plan we must further expand the mineral resources prospecting teams, and let them do their prospecting work throughout the country, and a large scale mining area should be marked out in the districts of Ryanggang Province and Tanchun.
  • 1965 [1963 July], Jo Yung Bok, “Art Blooms in Remote Province”, in New Life in the Homeland[2], Pyongyang: Foreign Languages Publishing House, →OCLC, page 95:
    I now live in Ryanggang Province lying in the northern region of Korea, adjacent to northeast China with the Amrok and Dooman Rivers forming the border line; it is an alpine area with mountains over 2,000 metres above sea level, among which is Mt. Baikdoo, 2,744 metres above sea level, the highest in Korea.
  • 1977 [1975 April], Hayashi Kaname, “Tracing Back to the Roots of Korean Revolution”, in Kim Il Sung: Great Leader of People[3], Pyongyang: Foreign Languages Publishing House, →OCLC, page 52:
    Hyesan is the capital of Ryanggang Province and a northern border city on the Amnok-gang River.
  • 1984, Zbigniew Szyndlar, “A description of a small collection of amphibians and reptiles from the People’s Democratic Republic of Korea with notes on the distribution of the herpetofauna in that country”, in Acta Zoologica Cracoviensia[4], volume 27, number 1, →ISBN Invalid ISBN, →ISSN, →OCLC, page 4:
    Hyesan. The capital of the Ryanggang Province. Material was taken in a gorge, about 1000 m a.s.l., by the River Tuman-gang (China boundary) north-east of Hyesan (1 June).
  • 1993, “North Korea in Pacific Asia”, in Chris Dixon, David Drakakis-Smith, editors, Economic and Social Development in Pacific Asia[5], Routledge, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 212:
    The consequences of this are predictably twofold: regional inequalities (reflecting unequal endowments and/or political clout); and sectoral imbalances as light industry (and hence the provinces) struggle to make ends meet. Rare quantitative data indicating as much can be found in a Soviet source (Trigubenko 1985: 127), which compares trends in provincial revenue and expenditure between 1980 and 1984. Overall, both sides of the ledger declined in the early 1980s in every province except one (Ryanggang). This did not stop central government increasing its exactions by 20 per cent over the same period. By region, while the Pyongan provinces look particularly squeezed, both Pyongyang itself and the Hamyong provinces seem to have held the line in terms of cuts.
  • 2015, Lin Jinsu, “Evaluating North Korea's Economic Policy in the 2000s—Economic Cooperation with China Is an Inevitable Choice”, in Carla P. Freeman, editor, China and North Korea: Strategic and Policy Perspectives from a Changing China[6], Palgrave Macmillan, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 218:
    In February 2005, Jilin Province’s Changbai County collaborated with Shandong’s Zhaojin Group to invest RMB 200 million in mining equipment in the Hyesan Youth Copper Mine in Ryanggang. The Hyesan Youth Copper Mine is one of the largest copper mines in Asia and its copper grade is 16 percent, double that of Northeast China.
  • 2015 December 4, Eric Talmadge, “North Korea hunkers down for harsh winter”, in AP News[7], archived from the original on 02 September 2023[8]:
    Darlene Tymo, the WFP’s country director in North Korea, said that although official statistics from the North Korean government are not out yet, the main harvest of the year is believed to have been worse than last year and that could mean especially remote and impoverished areas — particularly the mountainous provinces of Chagang and Ryanggang along the border with China — could be looking at a harsher than usual winter ahead.
  • 2018 June 20, “N. Korea data shows slight children's health gains: UN”, in France 24[9], archived from the original on 20 June 2018[10]:
    In the capital Pyongyang, 10 percent of children were affected by stunting, while in the rural Ryanggang province the rate was 32 percent.
  • 2019 May 28, Min Joo Kim, “North Koreans struggle to survive amid corruption and crackdowns on markets, says U.N. report”, in The Washington Post[11], →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 28 May 2019, Asia & Pacific‎[12]:
    Since Pyongyang’s centralized economic planning and distribution collapsed in 1990s, North Korean people have had to seek alternate sources of income away from state-assigned jobs and official food rations.
    “If you just follow instructions coming from the state, you starve to death,” a woman from Ryanggang Province in North Korea, was quoted as saying in the report.