Fourth Republic of South Korea

Fourth Republic of South Korea
Republic of Korea
대한민국
大韓民國

1972–1981

Flag

Capital Seoul
Language(s) Korean
Government Republic
President
 - 1972–1979 Park Chung-hee
 - 1979–1980 Choi Kyu-hah
 - 1980–1981 Chun Doo-hwan
Prime Minister
 - 1972–1975 Kim Jong-pil
 - 1975–1979 Choi Kyu-hah
 - 1979–1980 Shin Hyun-hwak
 - 1980–1981 Nam Duck-woo
Legislature National Assembly
History
 - Established 1972
 - Disestablished 1981
Currency Korean won

The Fourth Republic (Korean: 제4공화국, hanja: 第四共和國) was the government of South Korea between 1972 and 1981, regulated by the Yushin Constitution adopted in October 1972 and confirmed in a referendum on 21 November 1972. From 1972 to 1979, power was monopolized by Park Chung Hee and his Democratic Republican Party under the highly centralized authoritarian "Yushin System". With the assassination of Park on 26 October 1979, the Republic entered a period of tumult and transition under the short-lived nominal presidency of Choi Kyu-hah, controlled under severe escalating martial law and witnessing the coup d'état of December Twelfth, the violent unfolding of the Gwangju Democratization Movement and its armed suppression, the coup d'état of May Seventeenth and presidency of Chun Doo-hwan, and finally the transition to the Fifth Republic under Chun in 1981.

Contents

Economy

This period also saw continued dramatic economic growth, following the government's five-year plans. The government invested heavily in heavy industries.

International relations

A variety of events in international diplomacy led the Park regime to reconsider its diplomatic position. Notable here was the normalization of US diplomatic ties with the People's Republic of China, which cast doubt on South Korea's ability to count on Cold War backing from the US government. The South Korean government began to establish diplomatic relations with many countries, including Canada. In addition, the first round of Red Cross talks were held between South and North Korea. Park also announced plans for eventual reunification.

Yushin Constitution

Yushin Constitution
Hangul 유신 헌법
Hanja 維新憲法
Revised Romanization Yusin Heonbeop
McCune–Reischauer Yusin Hŏnpŏp

The Yushin Constitution, also spelled Yusin, was the official constitution of the South Korean Fourth Republic, 1972–1979. The term Yushin (hangul: 유신) in Korean means "rejuvenation" or "renewal", but it is also the term used to translate the "restoration" component of the Japanese 明治維新, Meiji-ishin, meaning Meiji Restoration. The significance of this allusion is in the "imperial" role which scholars have seen attached to the presidency under the Yushin Constitution, which established the presidency as a self-perpetuating and highly autocratic position in the South Korean government.[1]

President Park Chung-hee won the right to run for a third term in 1971 when the National Assembly, dominated by his Democratic Republican Party, amended the 1963 constitution to allow the incumbent president — Park himself — to run for three terms. He won a narrow victory over opposition candidate Kim Dae-jung.

Shortly after being sworn in, Park declared a state of emergency "based on the dangerous realities of the international situation". In October 1972, he dissolved the National Assembly and suspended the Constitution. Work was then begun on a new constitution, which was approved in a referendum held on 21 November 1972 by 91.5% of the voters. This large margin of victory can be attributed to two factors: First, during the state of emergency it was illegal to oppose the government; and secondly, the Park regime intimated that voting against the constitution meant exacerbating the tensions between North and South Korea.[2]

The Yushin Constitution was marked by the enormous powers granted to the president. He was elected for six years, with no limits on reelection. The people elected delegates to the National Conference for Unification, an electoral college that was charged with electing the president. The requirements for candidacy, however, were so stringent that only one candidate could be on the conference's ballot. Most notably, Park gained the power to appoint a large portion of the National Assembly, effectively guaranteeing a parliamentary majority. In effect, the constitution converted Park's presidency into a legal dictatorship.

The provisions of the Yushin Constitution were greeted with widespread but ineffective protest. Park was elected without opposition in 1972 and 1978. It remained in effect until after Park's assassination in 1979.

Assassination of Park and breakdown

The assassination of Park Chung-hee on 26 October 1979 was a pivotal moment in South Korean history, and a portentous one for the Yushin system. Park's Prime Minister, Choi Kyu-hah, assumed power as acting President, but was almost immediately marginalized by competing factions in the military. After the declaration of martial law following Park's death, General Jeong Seung-hwa acted as the government's chief administrator, and appointed Chun Doo-hwan the same day to lead a Joint Investigation Headquarters. On 27 October, Chun unilaterally assumed control of the KCIA and the government intelligence apparatus. On 6 December, the National Council for Unification confirmed Choi Kyu-hah as President according to the framework of the Yushin Constitution, but six days later Chun spearheaded a military coup, forcibly arresting and detaining General Jeong. Choi by this point had lost any meaningful authority in government, and Chun installed himself as Director of the KCIA early in 1980.

As growing social unrest came to a head in the Gwangju Democratization Movement, Chun tightened martial law and suppressed protests with troops, carrying out a further self-coup over the course of year. Elected President by the continuing National Council for Unification, Chun progressively dismantled the institutions of the Fourth Republic, dissolving the National Assembly and establishing an emergency national security committee with himself as director. Finally, Chun promulgated a new constitution in 1981, pushing it through a referendum and thereby formally dissolving the Fourth Republic and Park's Yushin system.

References

  1. ^ E.g., Kim, B.-K. & Vogel, E. F. (eds.) (2011) The Park Chung Hee Era: The Transformation of South Korea. Harvard University Press, p. 27. However, it is argued in the book that the Yushin Constitution merely formalised rather than directly established the "imperial presidency".
  2. ^ Yi, Pyŏng-chʻŏn (2006). Developmental dictatorship and the Park Chung-hee era: the shaping of modernity in the Republic of Korea. Homa & Sekey Books. p. 29. ISBN 9781931907286. http://books.google.com/books?id=DjQBBU8GQbQC&pg=PA29. Retrieved 20 November 2011. 

See also


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