The Representation of Micro-diverse Koreans: Past, Present, Future and Norms of Group Representation

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Abstract

South Korea has changed from a culturally homogeneous to a heterogeneous country through international marriages and multicultural families. This produces a unique kind of diversity in the experiences of families and individual persons, which may require political representation. This phenomenon of multiplicitous identity can be called micro-diversity. Although Korea has multicultural policies in response, its difference blind legislative representation is problematised in the process. Existing research into descriptive representation has explained why existing groups should be represented by members for reasons of significant historical disadvantages. These theories remain inapplicable or opposed to representing micro-diversity in Korea, where group attachment amongst micro-diverse persons is currently unclear. The paper shows, however, that potential groups are always part of representative relationships and that these are never equivalent to current constituencies. Hence, compelling norms of descriptive representation for potential groupsmay be articulated, which justify descriptive representation for micro-diverse Koreans.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)33-58
Number of pages26
JournalAsian Journal of Social Science
Volume47
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - 2019

Keywords

  • democracy
  • descriptive representation
  • Korea
  • micro-diversity
  • multiculturalism

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