Description
The Failure of Socialism in South Korea
1945-2007
Routledge Advances in Korean Studies Series
Author: Kim Yunjong
Language: EnglishSubject for The Failure of Socialism in South Korea:
Keywords
SME Management; Military Junta; korean; West Germany; Western European Social Democrats; Kim Daejung; United States Army Military Government; Young Men; PD Faction; General Empirical Relationships; rhee; Moderate Socialist Tendency; Reformist Socialist; North Korean Communist; Post-democratic Era; Western European Social; Korean Communists; SKWP; Western European Social Democracy; Moderate Socialist Movements; Rhee Regime; National Congressional Election; Japanese Colonial Government; Radical Socialist Ideology; Latin American Socialists; Moderate Socialist Parties; Rhee Administration
Publication date: 07-2015
· 15.6x23.4 cm · Hardback
Publication date: 11-2017
· 15.6x23.4 cm · Paperback
Description
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Despite the fact that socialist parties have proved to be a major political force across the world, this has not been the case in Asian countries. Socialism in South Korea is a quintessential example of this failure. Despite the existence of a socialist party and what would seem to be the right conditions for development, the Korean socialist tendency has failed to become a meaningful force in politics.
This book explores why and under what conditions Korean socialism has failed to develop into a social democrat movement in the post-war period. Within the context of the integration of structural and agency factors, it goes beyond the generally accepted view that the left failed because of suppression by the state and proffers that the real reason why socialism failed lay with its inability to develop beyond revolutionary socialism and build a more pragmatic social democracy that could develop a broad alliance within Korean society.
Also drawing on examples from Western Europe and Latin America, where left-wing forces have achieved power, this book will be of huge interest not only to students and scholars of Asian and Korean politics, but also socialism, comparative and international politics alike.
Introduction 1. Challenging the Conventional Approach 2. Social Democracy in the Core and Periphery 3. Socialism in the Liberation Period (1945–50) 4. The Cold War and Its Impact on Socialism (1950s–1960s) 5. Socialism under the Military Dictatorship (1962–87) 6. The New Left and the Revived Socialism (1987–99) 7. The Democratic Labour Party (2000–7) Conclusion
Yunjong Kim is a South Korean born practical political scientist. He is a visiting Senior Lecturer at the Northern University of Malaysia.