Women in the Korean National Assembly 1948-2020: Are they really ‘underqualified’ compared to men?
Publication Type
Journal Article
Publication Date
8-2021
Abstract
This study presents a novel analysis of women's qualifications compared to men in the Korean National Assembly (KNA) from 1948 to 2020. Throughout this period, women's parliamentary representation in South Korea lagged severely behind women's share of the voting population, a gap that may have stemmed from public perceptions that unlike their male counterparts, women members of parliament (MPs) are "underqualified." But are they really underqualified? Drawing upon the biographies of all MPs to have served in the KNA until 2020, this study finds KNA women parliamentarians' educational qualifications, ages, and incumbency rates to have risen considerably over time with women now more likely to hold advanced academic degrees than their male counterparts. Hence, this study concludes that although women in the Korean National Assembly may to a certain extent be "differently qualified" than male legislators, they can no longer be said to be "underqualified" compared to male MPs.
Discipline
Political Science
Research Areas
Political Science
Publication
KOREA OBSERVER
Volume
52
Issue
3
First Page
461
Last Page
482
ISSN
0023-3919
Identifier
10.29152/KOIKS.2021.52.3.461
Citation
JOSHI, Devin K..(2021). Women in the Korean National Assembly 1948-2020: Are they really ‘underqualified’ compared to men?. KOREA OBSERVER, 52(3), 461-482.
Available at: https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soss_research/3496
Additional URL
https://doi.org/10.29152/KOIKS.2021.52.3.461