South Korea THE CONSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORK
Late nineteenth-century and early twentieth-century
government buildings, Seoul
Courtesy Carpenter Collection, Library of Congress
Despite centuries of authoritarian and autocratic rule,
reform thinkers in nineteenth-century Korea had debated the
subject of government and advocated the rule of law and eventual
constitutional government as early as the 1890s. The notion of a
government limited by checks and balances under a constitutional
order was not entirely new to the Korean political setting in
1945. Organizations such as the Self-Strengthening Society
(Chaganghoe) used translations to promote the study of numerous
European constitutions and legal codes during the years just
before Japan annexed Korea in 1910. During Japanese rule (1910-
45), a self-styled Korean government in exile in China drafted
several charters and constitutions. Within colonial Korea, a
small Protestant community conducted self-governing
denominational meetings in accordance with rules of parliamentary
procedure. Japanese rule in Korea, however, was itself largely
exempt even from Japanese constitutional constraints
(see Korea under Japanese Rule
, ch. 1). Despite Korean interest in the idea
of constitutionalism, therefore, the colonial experience provided
Koreans with little opportunity to experience the practice of
limited government.
Since the formation of an independent South Korean republic
in 1948, the term constitutionalism--as it is popularly
understood in Western democracies--has become a major focus of
political strife. Although the concept has been interpreted in
various ways, there has been at least a nominal consensus that
constitutionalism would foster, if not guarantee, a general
framework for benevolent and effective government. The
constitution would help protect certain individual rights and
provide safeguards against the concentration of power in the
hands of a dictatorial group.
There have been numerous difficulties in adapting
constitutionalism to South Korea, not the least of these being
the reluctance of incumbent leaders to step down peacefully and
prepare for a transfer of power through the constitutional
process. The politics of constitutional manipulation has been
deadly serious, calculated to bolster or prolong the tenure of
incumbent presidents or to lend an aura of legitimization to a
regime brought to power by a coup (see
table 8, Appendix). South
Korea experienced its first peaceful transfer of power since
independence only in 1987
(see Political Dynamics
, this ch.). In
most of the leadership changes prior to 1987, the incumbents used
forceful tactics--including martial law and other surreptitious
parliamentary maneuvers--to change the constitution. The 1990s
began with discussions of possible further changes in the
fundamental law. It appeared that South Korea had yet to escape a
pattern, in which both powerholders and their political rivals
perceived a constitution as a tool for holding power, rather than
as a framework for long-term governance, and in which each
administration required one or more constitutional revisions.
The constitutional framework of the Sixth Republic, which
started in 1987, was based on a constitutional bill that was
passed by the National Assembly on October 12, 1987, and
subsequently approved by 93 percent of the voters in a national
referendum on October 28
(see The Legislature
, this ch.). The
bill was the product of painstaking negotiation and compromise
among the major political parties in the National Assembly,
unlike the preceding two constitutions, which were essentially
unilaterally drafted by the executive branch and then submitted
to referendums under emergency measures or martial law. The 1987
Constitution became effective on February 25, 1988, when Roh Tae
Woo was inaugurated as president. The new Constitution, which
consisted of a preamble, 130 articles, and supplementary
provisions, strengthened the power of the National Assembly and
considerably reduced the power of the executive. Its adoption
marked only the second time that the government and opposition
parties had produced a constitutional amendment bill by consensus
in South Korea's modern history--the first occasion, in 1980, was
cut short by a military coup d'état--and the first time that such
cooperation had been successful. The new fundamental law, the
first since 1960 not intended to extend the rule of the incumbent
president, provided for direct election of the president, an
issue the opposition parties had campaigned for since 1985. It
also eliminated or modified a number of provisions that had come
under criticism since the yusin (revitalization)
constitutional amendment in 1972.
The 1987 Constitution declares South Korea a democratic
republic, its territory consisting of "the Korean Peninsula and
its adjacent islands." Popular sovereignty is the norm of the
state; all public officials are described as servants of the
people; and the tenure and political impartiality of these
officials are protected by the provisions of law. In language not
found in earlier constitutional amendments, the Constitution
states that the "Republic of Korea shall seek unification and
shall formulate and carry out a policy of peaceful unification
based on the principles of freedom and democracy." In another
innovation clearly aimed at the past influence of the military on
politics and political succession, the Constitution stipulates
that "political neutrality shall be maintained" by the armed
forces.
The section on fundamental rights reflects continued
evolution toward the affirmation of civil rights and due process
of law
(see Human Rights
, this ch.). Individuals may not be
punished, placed under preventive restrictions, or subjected to
involuntary labor "except as provided by law and through lawful
procedures." The protection of habeas corpus, restored in the
1980 constitution but rarely honored in practice in political
cases under the Chun government, is further reinforced. People
detained or arrested must be informed of the reason and of their
right to be assisted by counsel. Family members of those arrested
or detained must be informed of the fact "without delay."
Prosecutors' failure to indict a criminal suspect or accused
person placed under detention might entitle the person to claim
compensation for wrongful arrest. Warrants must be issued by a
judge "through due procedures" rather than at the mere request of
prosecutors, as had often occurred, especially in political
cases, in the past. Other new provisions include the right of
citizens to receive aid from the state if they suffered injury or
death due to the criminal acts of others; the autonomy of
institutions of higher learning; and recognition of extended
labor rights.
The articles on rights, like other portions of the
Constitution, originated during a process of political compromise
that deferred a number of complex or controversial issues until a
later date. A number of new social welfare provisions were left
to subsequent legislation. These measures included aspirations to
protect working women from unjust discrimination, state
protection for citizens incapacitated by disease and old age,
environmental protection measures, housing development policies,
and "protection for mothers"
(see Public Health and Welfare
, ch.
2).
As in earlier constitutions, the formal provision of a right
was often qualified by other constitutional provisions or by
related laws. The most significant of these pre-existing laws was
the National Security Act, which severely truncated rights of due
process specified in the Constitution and the Code of Criminal
Procedure (1954) for persons accused of a variety of political
offenses.
The Constitution affirms both the right and the duty to work
and requires legislation for minimum wages and standards of
working conditions to "guarantee human dignity." Special
protection is provided to working women and working children.
Except for workers in important defense industries, workers have
the right to independent association, collective bargaining, and
collective action--a marked change from the 1980 constitution,
which stated that collective action could be regulated by law. By
1990, however, not all of the numerous laws that restricted the
exercise of labor rights had been thoroughly subjected to the
scrutiny of the Constitution Court
(see The Judiciary
, this ch.).
Chapter Nine of the Constitution, which is concerned with the
economy, continues the theme of the previous constitution in
committing the state to fostering economic growth and foreign
trade. As was the case under the 1980 constitution, tenant
farming is technically prohibited, but leasing or proxy
management of farmland is recognized in the interest of
increasing agricultural productivity and rational land
utilization. The new Constitution permits regulations designed to
"ensure the proper distribution of income" and prevent "abuse of
economic power." In an implicit recognition of severe disparities
in regional development in the past, the state is also charged
with ensuring balanced development of all regions of the country.
The government is responsible for establishing national standards
and for developing technical, scientific, and human resources.
Separation of powers came from the political process as well
as from the formal structure of government embodied in the
Constitution. The Sixth Republic's Constitution provides greater
formal balance than earlier constitutions among the three
branches of government. In important substantive areas, it
strengthens the legislature and the judiciary. In other areas, it
sets broad policy guidelines but leaves legislation to the
legislators. The resulting formal checks and balances were
reinforced by the outcome of the April 1988 general elections, in
which the president's party--the Democratic Justice Party--lost a
working majority in the legislature for the first time since the
establishment of the Republic of Korea.
The process for amending the Constitution received public
attention in early 1990 when the Democratic Justice Party and two
of the three major opposition parties announced plans to merge
and to amend the Constitution to provide for a cabinet-
responsibility system. Proposed amendments to the Constitution
could be introduced by the president or by a simple majority of
members of the National Assembly. A favorable vote of two-thirds
of the National Assembly members is required before amendments
could be placed before a national referendum. To be successful,
amendments require a majority vote by at least one-half of the
electorate eligible to vote in general elections. An incumbent
president may not benefit from an amendment extending the term of
the presidency.
Data as of June 1990
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