Title of article :
Electoral Rights beyond Territory and beyond Citizenship? The Case of South Korea
Author/Authors :
KALICKI ، KONRAD نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Abstract :
Current world migration is disrupting conceptual boundaries of national
democratic polities. One area where the traditional sense of political community is
being challenged concerns electoral rights for non-resident citizens and non-citizen
residents. With the right to vote being an ultimate expression of political membership
in a democratic nation-state, any debates about these two groups’ suffrage rights
constitute a critical source of empirical insights into how democracies re-imagine
themselves away from fixed identities under the pressure of globalization. In view
of this, this paper examines the understudied case of South Korea, utilizing the most
systematic theoretical framework currently available: one developed by RainerBaub¨ock.
It provides direct empirical evidence that undermines the conventional wisdom that
Koreans define their polity purely on the basis of their ethnicity. Contrary to our
expectations, a close scrutiny of the Korean debates in question reveals ample references
to the civic ideals of political community. The line of reasoning that emphasizes duties
towards the welfare of the polity has produced powerful justifications for denying
political franchise to overseas compatriots, while granting limited electoral rights to
qualified resident foreigners. A broader implication of this empirical finding is that it
highlights a fundamental limitation of Baub¨ock’s theoretical framework: it conceives
political franchise only as an expression of people’s rights in regard to law-making.
The case of South Korea, thus, suggests that Baub¨ock’s scheme should be modified to
address both the rights-based logics and the somewhat obsolete duty-based logic of
franchise extension.
Journal title :
Japanese Journal of Political Science
Journal title :
Japanese Journal of Political Science