Chronos wrote:
There are very few westerners who have managed to settle in North Korea and you certainly wouldn't be allowed into any "sensitive" position. The few westerners who do live there are usually used for propaganda films.
I've been researching North Korea for years and years, so I know the options available. It would be through a foreign (or strictly monitored domestic) organisation, sanctioned by the government. I'm hoping to work in the field of economic development or policy analysis, in order to assist the country in re-mapping its agricultural system and economic organisation (within the constraints of a socialist system, of course).
That being said, the agrarian sector is increasingly privatised, and Kim Jong-il himself has expressed an interest in introducing (albeit limited) market economics (so long as the regime maintains its hold on power). The heir apparent Kim Jong-un has expressed the priority of economic development over military capabilities as recently as November, 2010. But the regime is at a crossroads - it knows that it must change, but cannot decide how and where. This is why North Korea will discuss fundamental structural change in conjunction with military provocations. It's in a volatile position, and it's an exciting field to be working in! (At least in my opinion, because the regime is both at its most, and least, malleable).
And you'd be surprised at the number of westerners living in North Korea - it's reminiscent of the old trading districts in feudal Japan and China. Foreigners are allocated to special districts (cut off from the rest of P'yongyang). But the variety of people living there is surprising - businessmen, diplomats, NGO workers, UN ambassadors, etc.) When looking at North Korea propaganda, you need to consider its intended audience. Much of what you see is intended for foreigners, and is often quite different from what is intended for the domestic population. That's why I've been learning Korean - so that I can read first-hand documents and communicate with Koreans myself.
But I digress...
At the moment, I need to focus on the usefulness of my degrees!