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Between the Streets and the Assembly - Social Movements, Political Parties, and Democracy in Korea (Hardcover)
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Between the Streets and the Assembly - Social Movements, Political Parties, and Democracy in Korea (Hardcover)
Series: Hawai'i Studies on Korea
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Streets in Korea rarely go quiet without first having a public
demonstration and Korean citizens are known as seasoned protestors,
charting the course of national politics. Between the Streets and
the Assembly explores how protest movements have become the
prominent mode of democratic politics in Korea, in contrast to
political parties in the National Assembly that have lagged behind
in partisan representation and accountability. To unpack this
political dynamic, this book closely follows three groups of
democracy activists who were born in their resistance to military
dictatorships but who pursued different methods of democratic
representation in postauthoritarian Korea (1987-2020). One group
stayed in civil society and organized powerful protests outside
formal institutions; another group chose to join existing parties
with the aim of reforming legislative politics; and the third group
was devoted to forming separate progressive parties to be the agent
of transformative agenda. By analyzing the interactive evolution of
these three modes of democratic representation, Yoonkyung Lee finds
that social movement organizations have been more effective than
activist-turned politicians in centrist or progressive parties in
creating coordination infrastructures for collective action.
Through the practice of organizing national solidarity networks,
innovating the methods of mass street demonstrations, and drawing
professional expertise to formulate policy alternatives, Korean
civic groups have built the capacity to directly shape and alter
the course of national politics, unlike activist-turned politicians
who remained divided with no common political programs. This study
asserts that social movement organizations and political parties
develop variable capacities for democratic representation,
depending on coevolutionary interactions with each other. The
experience of Korean democracy shows social movement groups can be
a powerful agent of national politics against the scholarly
assumption that views civic associations as narrowly focused,
transient organizations. Between the Streets and the Assembly
suggests a different possibility of political process, one in which
civic groups and participatory citizens, not political parties, are
the primary drivers of democratic politics.
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