Abstract
This paper attempts to explain why and how the middle class in Korea decisively joined the democratic movement in 1987 by drawing special attention to the role played by the “middling grassroots” (MG). MG was formed out of the common experience of student activism and contesting subcultures, which were widely dispersed over Korean university campuses during the 1980s. In addition, this paper examines the contrasting views on the Korean democratic transition by Bruce Cumings and Adam Przeworski. This substantive analysis attempts to show how such discord can be resolved by working out a mediating variable between action and social structure. It is suggested that the concept of MG is a good example of such a mediating variable.
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Han, SJ. Modernization and the Rise of Civil Society: The Role of the “Middling Grassroots” for Democratization in Korea. Human Studies 24, 113–132 (2001). https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1010767130602
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1010767130602