Rationality and Democratic Transition in Developing Societies
There is an ongoing debate on the usefulness of rational choice
theory in analyzing political phenomena in the non-Western world as
well as its usefulness in analyzing particular real world
situations. Using institutional changes during the democratic
transition in Korea, this book tests the application of rational
choice theory in the analyses of real-world events in non-Western
societies. This book will add to the accumulated knowledge to the
study of democratic transition in Korea and in developing countries
in general. This book will also help us to understand why seemingly
strange set of events occurred in Korea and elsewhere when all
political actors behaved in a rational fashion. By uncovering how
politicians and policy-makers thought, behaved, and made decisions
in the past, this book will contribute to our ability not only to
explain what have occurred but to anticipate the course of
political events in the future in developing countries undergoing
democratic transition.
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