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논문 기본 정보

자료유형
학술저널
저자정보
Eunkyung Kim (Hansung University)
저널정보
숙명여자대학교 아시아여성연구원 Asian Women Asian Women Vol.36 No.3
발행연도
2020.9
수록면
71 - 89 (19page)
DOI
10.14431/aw.2020.9.36.3.71

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초록· 키워드

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This article argues that the process of institutionalizing democracy in South Korea included ambivalent legal bases for women’s rights by analyzing the family law codification process. Amidst the haste that accompanied the beginning of the Cold War, through division, war, and the occupation of the U.S. military government, the South Korean government began the process of institutionalizing democracy before it could complete the process of decolonization. In the historical context of post-coloniality and the establishment of a democratic republic, women became the symbol of democracy with the new Civil Code that remade them into citizens with rights of the nation-state. Yet, women were also treated as the last bulwark of tradition, repositories of a “national tradition,” in the legislative discussions that led to the promulgation of the new Civil Code, and their rights were eventually significantly compromised. This duality demonstrates key tensions in the conceptualization of equal rights in a post-colonial democracy.

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Abstract
Introduction
Women’s Rights from the 1948 Constitution to the 1958 Civil Code
Influential Lawmakers’ Conceptions of Rights under Family Law
Women’s Rights in Family Law: Rights amid Patriarchal Submission
Conclusion: The Legacy of Post-Colonial Democracy and Women’s Civil Rights
References

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