Jae Yong Kim, a graduate of Hamilton College with a major in World Politics, has profound interests in human rights, inter-Korean relations, and US foreign strategies toward Northeast Asia. As a research intern at Han-gang Law Corporation in South Korea, he assisted former South Korean Congressman Choi Jae-Cheon in researching the fairness of the Korea-US FTA and the influence of Canadian mad-cow disease (MCD) on the spread of MCD in the United States and South Korea. In order to learn more about Korean foreign policies and diplomacy, he completed an intense workshop program organized by the Institute of Foreign Affairs and National Security, a research institute directly affiliated with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade in Korea. In 2009, he received a fellowship sponsored by the Arthur Levitt Public Affairs Center at Hamilton College. As a result, he traveled to Seoul, Korea and assisted Professor Dingding Chen in researching how to ameliorate the North Korean human rights crisis peacefully and effectively by focusing on the roles of NGOs and the South Korean government. In 2009, he was elected to become a Class of 2010 Representative for Hamilton College Student Assembly. As an active executive member of Asian Cultural Society at his college for more than 3 years, he organized and led innovative cultural events on campus. He strongly believes that the two Koreas will achieve reunification in the near future. When a restructured Korea meets with other countries, such as the United States and China, to establish the reunification negotiation, he would like to be involved in this historical moment as an international law and negotiation maven and successfully lead the talk to accomplish peaceful reunification.