The dual strategy and gender policies of the women’s movement in Korea: Family headship system repeat through strategic innovation
- Authors
- Suh, D.
- Issue Date
- 2011
- Citation
- Sociological Focus, v.44, no.2, pp.124 - 148
- Indexed
- SCOPUS
- Journal Title
- Sociological Focus
- Volume
- 44
- Number
- 2
- Start Page
- 124
- End Page
- 148
- URI
- https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/114692
- DOI
- 10.1080/00380237.2011.10571391
- ISSN
- 0038-0237
- Abstract
- Social movements sometimes successfully attain their goals by implementing policies and laws that represent their claims. Movement leaders raise issues susceptible to enactment as policies or laws, exploit legally and institutionally assured resources, and even participate at times in governmental policymaking and parliamentary lawmaking processes. This engagement strategy maximizes a movement’s power to achieve its goals only when it is combined with the conventional activities of mobilizing collective action and forming dense networks across movement organizations to pressure the state. Based on the case study of Korean women’s movements and their efforts to abrogate the patrilineal succession of family headship, I argue that movement activists’ strategic innovation of blending “institutional politics” with conventional “movement politics”—that is, pursuing a dual strategy (Cohen and Arato 1992) and evolving into “movement institutionalization”—is critical to accomplishing gender policies and laws that, at least institutionally and legally, ensure gender equality. © 2011 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.
- Files in This Item
- There are no files associated with this item.
- Appears in
Collections - Graduate School of International Studies > Korean Studies > 1. Journal Articles
Items in ScholarWorks are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.