✍️ 필사 모드: Introduction to Political Science — Democracy, Political Systems, Elections, and International Relations
EnglishIntroduction
Turn on the news and political stories appear every day. Presidential decisions, legislative processes, diplomatic summits, election results -- politics affects every corner of our daily lives. Yet surprisingly few people can clearly answer the question: "What is politics?"
This post is an introductory guide to political science for non-majors. It covers political concepts from the basics to political systems, democracy, electoral systems, and international relations. It does not support or criticize any particular party or politician, maintaining a neutral and educational perspective.
1. What Is Political Science
The Definition of Politics
Politics refers to the process of authoritatively allocating scarce resources and values in a society. American political scientist David Easton defined politics as "the authoritative allocation of values for a society."
Simply put, politics is the process of deciding who gets what and how much. Where to spend the budget, how much tax to collect from whom, what laws to create -- all of these are political decisions.
The Nature of Power
At the heart of politics lies power -- the ability to influence others' behavior.
Types of power can be broadly categorized into three:
| Type | Description | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Coercive Power | Power through physical force or punishment | Law enforcement, military force |
| Reward Power | Influence through providing rewards | Subsidies, tax breaks |
| Legitimate Power | Power granted by institutions and law | Authority of presidents, legislators |
German sociologist Max Weber classified legitimate authority into three types:
- Traditional Authority - Based on customs and traditions (kings, chiefs)
- Charismatic Authority - Based on a leader's personal appeal
- Legal-Rational Authority - Based on law and institutions (modern democratic states)
Major Fields of Political Science
Political science divides into various sub-fields:
- Comparative Politics: Comparing political systems across countries
- International Relations: Relations between states, war and peace, international organizations
- Political Thought: Political philosophy from Plato to the present
- Political Process: Elections, parties, public opinion, civic participation
- Public Administration: Government organizations and public policy implementation
2. Comparing Political Systems
Presidential System
A system where citizens directly elect the president, who serves as head of the executive branch.
Key features:
- President elected by direct popular vote
- Strict separation between executive and legislative branches
- Fixed presidential term (5 years, single term in South Korea)
- Legislature cannot be dissolved; legislature cannot vote no-confidence (impeachment is an exception)
Advantages: Political stability, strong leadership, clear accountability
Disadvantages: Possible gridlock between president and legislature, winner-takes-all structure
Representative countries: United States, South Korea, Brazil
Parliamentary System
A system where the leader of the majority party or coalition in parliament serves as prime minister and leads the executive.
Key features:
- Citizens elect parliament members; parliament selects the prime minister
- Executive and legislative branches are fused
- Parliament can dissolve the cabinet through a vote of no confidence
- Prime minister has the power to dissolve parliament
Advantages: Easy cooperation between executive and legislature, flexible government transitions
Disadvantages: Potential for political instability (frequent cabinet changes), complexity of coalition governments
Representative countries: United Kingdom, Japan, Germany, Canada
Semi-Presidential System
A hybrid system where the president and prime minister share executive power.
Key features:
- President is directly elected by citizens
- Prime minister is selected from the parliamentary majority
- President handles foreign affairs/defense, prime minister handles domestic affairs (division varies by country)
Advantages: Power distribution, checks and balances
Disadvantages: Conflict possible when president and prime minister belong to different parties (cohabitation)
Representative countries: France, Taiwan, Finland
Federal vs. Unitary States
| Category | Federal System | Unitary State |
|---|---|---|
| Definition | Central and local governments share power by constitution | Central government holds ultimate authority |
| Local Authority | Strong autonomy (can make independent laws) | Limited autonomy delegated from center |
| Representative Countries | USA, Germany, Australia, India | South Korea, Japan, France, UK |
South Korea's Political System
South Korea operates as a Presidential + Unitary State system.
- President directly elected by citizens (5-year single term)
- Unicameral National Assembly (300 seats)
- Local autonomy exists but central government authority is strong
- Constitutional Court handles constitutional review
3. Understanding Democracy
What Is Democracy
Democracy is a political system where "the people are the source of power." It derives from the Greek words demos (people) + kratos (rule).
As Abraham Lincoln famously expressed, "government of the people, by the people, for the people" captures the essence of democracy.
Direct vs. Representative Democracy
Direct Democracy:
- Citizens directly participate in policy decisions
- Ancient Athens is the classic example
- Applied in modern times through referendums and plebiscites
- Impractical for large-scale nations
Representative (Indirect) Democracy:
- Citizens elect representatives who make policy decisions
- The basic form of modern democratic states
- Representatives are elected and held accountable through elections
Core Principles of Liberal Democracy
Liberal democracy is not merely majority rule but includes the following principles:
- Protection of Fundamental Rights - Freedom of speech, assembly, religion, etc.
- Rule of Law - No one is above the law
- Separation of Powers - Separation of legislative, executive, and judicial branches
- Protection of Minorities - Fundamental rights that even majority rule cannot violate
- Regular Elections - Citizens as sovereign choose their representatives
- Freedom of Press and Association - An open society where criticism and oversight are possible
The Trap of Majority Rule
Democracy is often equated with majority rule, but majority rule has traps.
Tyranny of the Majority: A situation where the majority violates the fundamental rights of minorities. For example, even a democratically achieved majority passing discriminatory laws against a specific religion or race cannot be justified.
Safeguards against this include:
- Constitutional protection of fundamental rights
- Constitutional Court or Supreme Court judicial review
- International human rights conventions
- Freedom of the press and civil society oversight
4. Political Ideology Spectrum
Origins of Left and Right
The terms Left and Right originated during the French Revolution. In the National Assembly, royalist supporters sat to the right of the speaker, while those favoring change sat to the left.
Conservative and Progressive
| Category | Conservative | Progressive/Liberal |
|---|---|---|
| Core Values | Tradition, order, stability | Change, equality, reform |
| Economic View | Market freedom, small government | Welfare expansion, stronger government role |
| Social View | Emphasis on traditional values | Emphasis on diversity and individual freedom |
| Foreign Policy | Security-centered, alliance strengthening | Dialogue and cooperation, multilateralism |
Note: Conservative and progressive mean different things in different countries. American "liberal" and European "liberal" can have different meanings. An individual can also be economically conservative and socially progressive.
The Political Compass (2D Spectrum)
A single left-right dimension is insufficient to explain complex political positions, leading to 2D models.
Horizontal axis: Economic Left (equality) -- Economic Right (free market)
Vertical axis: Authoritarian (stronger state control) -- Libertarian (maximum individual freedom)
This model creates four quadrants:
- Authoritarian Left: Strong state intervention + economic equality
- Authoritarian Right: Strong state control + market economy
- Libertarian Left: Individual freedom + social equality
- Libertarian Right: Minimal state + free market (traditional libertarian)
The Meaning of Center
Center refers to a position not leaning toward either left or right. Center does not mean "indifference" but rather a pragmatic attitude of judging flexibly on each issue.
5. Electoral Systems
Electoral systems are the mechanisms through which citizens' preferences are reflected in the selection of representatives. The choice of electoral system significantly affects party structure, political culture, and representativeness.
Single-Member District Plurality
A system where only one representative is elected per district. The candidate with the most votes wins (First Past The Post).
Advantages: Simple and easy to understand, strong local representation, tendency toward stable two-party system (Duverger's Law)
Disadvantages: Many wasted votes, disadvantages small parties, possible gap between vote share and seat share
Representative examples: United States, United Kingdom, Canada
Proportional Representation
Seats are distributed in proportion to each party's vote share.
Advantages: Multiple parties can enter parliament, fewer wasted votes and higher representativeness, minority opinions reflected
Disadvantages: Risk of party fragmentation, potential instability from coalition requirements, weaker direct connection between voters and legislators
Representative examples: Netherlands, Israel, Sweden
Mixed Electoral Systems
A combination of single-member districts and proportional representation.
German-style Mixed-Member Proportional:
- Composed of district representatives + proportional representatives
- Total seats distributed according to party vote proportions
- Overhang seats may occur
South Korea's Mixed System:
- 253 district seats + 47 proportional seats (21st National Assembly)
- Semi-linked proportional representation (limited linkage)
- Two votes: 1 for district candidate + 1 for party
Comparison of Systems
| Criterion | Single-Member District | Proportional | Mixed |
|---|---|---|---|
| Representativeness | Low | High | Medium |
| Number of Parties | Two-party tendency | Multi-party tendency | Multi-party tendency |
| Stability | High | Can be low | Medium |
| Local Connection | Strong | Weak | Medium |
| Wasted Votes | Many | Few | Medium |
6. South Korea's Political Structure
Separation of Powers
The foundation of Korean politics is the separation of powers. The principle of dividing state power into legislative, executive, and judicial branches to check and balance each other.
Legislature (National Assembly): Law creation and amendment, budget deliberation and confirmation, government inspection and investigation, impeachment authority
Executive (President and Government): Law enforcement, diplomacy, national defense, public safety, presidential decrees, official appointments
Judiciary (Courts): Legal interpretation and trials, Constitutional Court constitutional review, protection of citizens' fundamental rights
Legislative Process
- Bill Introduction - Proposed by 10 or more legislators or the government
- Standing Committee Review - Expert review by the relevant committee
- Legislation and Judiciary Committee Review - Legal framework and form review
- Plenary Vote - Majority of registered members present, majority of present members approve
- Presidential Promulgation - President signs and promulgates (veto power available)
- Law Takes Effect - 20 days after promulgation (unless otherwise specified)
Impeachment Process
A procedure applied when the president or other high-ranking officials violate the constitution or law.
- National Assembly Impeachment Motion - Proposed by majority; requires two-thirds supermajority
- Suspension of Presidential Authority - Immediately upon passage
- Constitutional Court Trial - Decision within 180 days
- Decision - Removal requires agreement of 6 or more justices
Impeachment serves as democracy's self-correcting mechanism, an important institutional check on power abuse.
7. Fundamentals of International Relations
Major Theories of International Relations
Three representative theories explain international relations.
Realism:
- The international system is anarchic (no overarching authority)
- States prioritize national interest and security
- Balance of Power maintains peace
- Key scholars: Hans Morgenthau, Kenneth Waltz
Liberalism:
- International cooperation is possible and desirable
- International organizations, trade, and democracy promote peace
- Economic interdependence increases the cost of war, deterring it
- Key scholars: Robert Keohane, Joseph Nye
Constructivism:
- International relations are shaped not just by material power but by ideas and identity
- State interests and identities are not fixed but socially constructed
- Norms, culture, and historical context influence state behavior
- Key scholar: Alexander Wendt
The Role of the United Nations
The United Nations (UN), established in 1945, has 193 member states.
Key Bodies:
- General Assembly - All member states participate, one vote per country
- Security Council - 5 permanent members (US, UK, France, Russia, China) + 10 non-permanent members
- Secretariat - Administrative body led by the Secretary-General
- International Court of Justice (ICJ) - Resolves legal disputes between states
Security Council Veto: A single permanent member's opposition can defeat a resolution. While designed to balance great powers, it is also criticized for hindering effective UN responses.
NATO and the US-South Korea Alliance
NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organization):
- Collective security alliance established in 1949
- Attack on one member is considered an attack on all (Article 5)
- Remains a cornerstone of European security post-Cold War
US-South Korea Alliance:
- Based on the 1953 Mutual Defense Treaty
- US forces stationed in South Korea
- Cornerstone of Korean Peninsula security
- Expanded across economic, technological, and cultural dimensions
Major International Issues
Key issues in modern international relations:
- Climate change and environmental cooperation
- Nuclear non-proliferation and disarmament
- Cybersecurity
- Global economic imbalances and trade conflicts
- Refugee and immigration issues
- Counter-terrorism
8. Political Participation
The Meaning of Voting
Voting is the most fundamental way citizens exercise power in a democracy. You might think one vote cannot make a big difference, but countless elections have been decided by narrow margins.
The meaning of voting extends beyond simply choosing a winner:
- Exercising rights and duties as a citizen
- A means of holding politicians accountable
- A collective expression of society's direction
- An expression of support for the democratic system itself
Civic Participation Beyond Voting
Political participation is not limited to voting:
- Party activities: Join a party to participate in policy-making
- Civil society organizations: Environmental, human rights, education movements
- Petitions: Convey opinions on specific issues to government or legislature
- Assemblies and demonstrations: Express views within legal boundaries
- Public opinion formation: Debates, opinion sharing, social media activity
- Running for office: Directly participate in politics to drive change
The Danger of Political Apathy
Just because you are not interested in politics does not mean politics stops affecting you.
Consequences of political apathy:
- Distorted representation: When only certain generations or groups vote, policies skew in their favor
- Weakened checks: Without citizen oversight, the risk of power abuse increases
- Democratic backsliding: Low voter turnout weakens democratic legitimacy
- Generational imbalance: Interests of low-turnout generations are harder to reflect in policy
9. Media and Politics
The Role of Media
Media plays such an important role in politics that it is often called the "Fourth Estate."
- Information delivery: Conveys political events and policies to citizens
- Watchdog: Monitors and exposes power abuse
- Agenda Setting: Influences which issues are considered important
- Public opinion formation: Influences citizens' political judgment
Media Literacy
Media literacy is the ability to critically analyze and evaluate media content.
When consuming political news, consider:
- Source verification - Who is providing this information and why?
- Fact vs. opinion - Is this factual reporting or commentary?
- Multiple perspectives - How are other outlets covering this?
- Context - What does this information mean in the broader context?
- Emotional response check - Is there an intent to provoke anger or fear?
Distinguishing Fake News
Fake news (disinformation) is a serious threat to democracy.
Types of fake news:
- Disinformation: Deliberately created false information
- Misinformation: False information spread without malicious intent
- Malinformation: True information distributed with intent to cause harm
Verification checklist:
- Is the source clear and reliable?
- Are other major outlets also reporting this?
- Is the date current (old events sometimes circulated as recent)?
- Are expert quotes included?
- Has a fact-checking organization verified it?
Using Fact-Checking Services
Various fact-checking organizations and services exist in South Korea:
- SNU Fact Check (Seoul National University)
- JTBC Fact Check
- NewSTOF
- Individual media outlets' fact-checking sections
Cross-checking multiple sources is the best way to obtain accurate information.
10. Conclusion -- Politics Belongs to Everyone
The Significance of Studying Political Science
Studying political science is not about supporting a particular party. It is about understanding political phenomena, making rational judgments, and fulfilling our role as citizens.
What an introduction to political science can give us:
- Critical thinking - The ability to logically analyze political claims
- Institutional understanding - Understanding how the society we live in operates
- Global perspective - Understanding world affairs and Korea's position
- Civic awareness - Recognition of rights and duties
Further Reading
If you are interested in political science:
Introductory Books:
- Andrew Heywood, "Politics" (Theory and Practice of Modern Politics)
- Robert Dahl, "On Democracy"
- Joseph Nye, "Understanding International Conflicts"
Online Courses:
- K-MOOC for political science courses
- KOCW (Korea Open CourseWare) university political science lectures
Everyday Practice:
- Compare candidate platforms during elections
- Cross-check news through multiple media outlets
- Review National Assembly proceedings and legislation information
- Take interest in local community issues
Key Summary
| Topic | Key Content |
|---|---|
| Essence of Politics | The process of authoritatively allocating social values |
| Political Systems | Various forms including presidential, parliamentary, semi-presidential |
| Democracy | Popular sovereignty principle; majority rule + minority protection are core |
| Political Ideology | 2D model (economic/freedom) is more accurate than 1D (left-right) |
| Electoral Systems | Party structure and representativeness vary greatly by system |
| Korean Politics | Presidential + separation of powers + unitary state |
| International Relations | Multiple perspectives: realism, liberalism, constructivism |
| Political Participation | Participation possible through various methods beyond voting |
| Media | Media literacy is the foundation of healthy democracy |
Politics is not just "their" business. Taxes, education, healthcare, safety, environment -- every area of our lives is connected to political decisions.
Taking interest in politics is the first step as a democratic citizen. We hope this post helps you better understand politics and make better-informed judgments.
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Turn on the news and political stories appear every day. Presidential decisions, legislative process...