Constitutionalism on Trial in South Korea
By: KIM, Sung Ho.
Contributor(s): CHAIHARK, Hahm.
Material type: ArticlePublisher: Washington, DC : The Johns Hopkins University Press , April 2005Subject(s): Democracy -- Korea (South) | Korea (South) -- Politics and governmentJournal of Democracy 16, 2, p. 28-42Abstract: During the early years of South Korea's transition to democracy, expanding popular rule and deepening individual rights went hand-in-hand. But with Roh Moo Hyun's narrow election to the presidency on 19 December 2002, the democratic transition that South Korea began in 1987 entered a profoundly new era. The presidency has exposed rifts between majority rule and constitutionalism that the country's judiciary is struggling to bridge.No physical items for this record
During the early years of South Korea's transition to democracy, expanding popular rule and deepening individual rights went hand-in-hand. But with Roh Moo Hyun's narrow election to the presidency on 19 December 2002, the democratic transition that South Korea began in 1987 entered a profoundly new era. The presidency has exposed rifts between majority rule and constitutionalism that the country's judiciary is struggling to bridge.
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