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Democracy Begins at the Grass Roots


Article # : 13258 

Section : CURRENT ISSUES
Issue Date : 10 / 1987  2,129 Words
Author : Choi Sung-Il
Choi Sung-Il is executive director of the Korean Institute for Human Rights.

       Recent developments in South Korea have people buzzing over the immediate prospects for the return of democracy. As Chun Doo-Hwan's dictatorship finally relented to street protests led by students and joined by the middle class, people of varying shades of political conviction have turned optimistic about people power and the imminent arrival of democracy.
       
        There are, however, skeptics who remain unconvinced of the cultural suitability of the Korean people for democracy. In particular, some feel troubled by certain elements of Confucianism such as authority, conformity, and hierarchy, which they argue impede compromise and the development of consensus - without which democracy can hardly evolve, let alone function.
       
        If optimists understand democracy primarily in institutional terms, that is, presidential rule with direct elections, skeptics conceive of it mainly as a political cultural process involving compromise and consensus-building. In this regard, skepticism is derived from a limited understanding of Confucianism. Discussion of the nature of democracy and Confucianism as they relate to the prerequisites of democracy is helpful.
       
        A set of institutions by itself does not make a democracy viable any more than a congeries of cultural traits does. Democracy is an institutional and cultural process in which all contestants for power and valued resources in society compete and cooperate with one another within the rubric of the rule of law and according to the democratic rules of the game.
       
        Let us review the discussion of the nature of democracy ... (1997 of 13918 Characters)
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