1. The Ministry of National Defence in South Korea: Military dominance despite civilian supremacy?
- Author
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Kim, Insoo and Kuehn, David
- Subjects
Asia ,democracy ,Sociology and Political Science ,Politikwissenschaft ,Friedens- und Konfliktforschung, Sicherheitspolitik ,Peace and Conflict Research, International Conflicts, Security Policy ,civil-military cooperation ,Südkorea ,soldier ,South Korea ,Autoritarismus ,defense policy ,Political science ,military ,reform ,Militär ,zivil-militärische Zusammenarbeit ,Verteidigungspolitik ,Demokratisierung ,democratization ,Asien ,defense ,authoritarianism ,Ministerium ,ddc:320 ,Political Science and International Relations ,Soldat ,Verteidigung ,ministry ,Demokratie - Abstract
South Korea's transition from military-controlled authoritarianism to consolidated civilian-dominated democracy is widely considered a success story. However, civilians' roles within the MND remain severely limited due to the institutional design of the MND. A decentralised structure emerged in the MND, delegating policy decision-making in critical areas to professional soldiers. Data analysis on 1,060 employees in 21 MND departments shows a clear cut between the military domain and the civilian domain within the MND, which enabled the military to thwart 30 years of civilian efforts to reform the military structure without challenging the principle of civilian supremacy.
- Published
- 2022
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