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Publication

Conflict Of Institutions: Foreign Portfolio Investment As An Impetus For Legal Education Reform In Korea

Kim, Alex
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Publisher
Date
2020
Additional date(s)
2020-08-19
Abstract
In 2004, the Supreme Court of Korea endorsed a plan to completely restructure the country's legal education system from an undergraduate, formalist one to a graduate-level, "American-style" law school system. However, this plan was just the last of a series of similar proposals since 1995, each of which was rejected by the judiciary and Korean legal community as a whole. By providing historical and contextual evidence, this paper puts forward the argument that the Neoliberal reforms of the 1990s succeeded in attracting foreign portfolio investment, but had a limited impact on Korea's longstanding social and legal institutions. Foreign investors did not share the same informal norms or assumptions with their domestic counterparts, causing a variety of conflicts in the Korean financial system. As foreign portfolio investment continued to rise and peaked in 2004, these issues intensified and created demand for greater versatility in the Korean legal profession to help resolve some of these conflicts, making education reform inevitable. Thus, the Korean experience affirms the importance of society's institutional framework in the development of its legal system and illustrates how an already established system can evolve in response to major political and economic changes.
Contents
Subject
Korea
Law
Law School
Legal Education
Asian Financial Crisis
Reform
Institution
Confucianism
Legal Tradition
Legal
Lawyer
Foreign Investment
Foreign Portfolio Investment
Economics
Subject(s)
Research Projects
Organizational Units
Journal Issue
Genre
Description
Format
Department
Economics
Advisor
Elliot, Dawn