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South Korean presidential politics turns liberal: Transformative change or business as usual?

Cited 4 time in Web of Science Cited 6 time in Scopus
Authors

Dostal, Jorg Michael

Issue Date
2017-07
Publisher
Basil Blackwell
Citation
Political Quarterly, Vol.88 No.3, pp.480-491
Abstract
The impeachment of President Park Gyeun-hye on 10 March 2017 saw South Korean politics enter a period of crisis. Her removal from office, the result of an unprecedented mass movement of citizen protests, provided a springboard for the subsequent success of the liberal candidate, Moon Jae-in, in the presidential election of 9 May 2017. This article suggests that political change in South Korea is only possible if actors move beyond the politics of personality, and tackle the structural reasons for the policy failures of recent times. Further, if democracy, a humane economic system and responsive political institutions are going to be developed and nourished, the country's imperial presidency' needs to be reformed. In particular, the current winner-takes-all' politics, with the presidency as the main locus of power, needs to be reformed in ways that promote a more balanced political system, increasing the influence of other actors and institutions.
ISSN
0032-3179
Language
ENG
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/154095
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-923X.12394
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