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@book{ Ro2025, title = {The 2024 self-coup in South Korea: democracy challenged and saved}, author = {Ro, Kyunghyun and Croissant, Aurel and Kuehn, David}, year = {2025}, series = {GIGA Focus Asien}, pages = {11}, volume = {3}, address = {Hamburg}, publisher = {German Institute for Global and Area Studies (GIGA) - Leibniz-Institut für Globale und Regionale Studien, Institut für Asien-Studien}, doi = {https://doi.org/10.57671/gfas-25032}, urn = {https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-102294-1}, abstract = {South Korea's 2024 Martial Law Crisis marked the country’s gravest democratic crisis since democratisation. President Yoon’s declaration of martial law and mobilisation of military troops amounted to a self-coup, which exposed the ways partisan security networks and polarised elites can undermine even well-institutionalised democracies. Years of democratic backsliding culminated in this crisis, for which long-standing polarisation and Yoon's politicisation of the security sector set the stage. Short-term triggers included probes targeting the first lady, election fraud conspiracy theories, and pressure after the opposition's 2024 landslide victory. On 3 December 2024 elite military units were mobilised to occupy key institutions. Martial law was lifted after six hours, but the crisis continued: while Yoon was detained and awaiting the result of the impeachment procedure, pro-Yoon and anti-Yoon forces clashed in the streets. International responses were muted: the US expressed confidence in Korea's democratic institutions but avoided direct criticism, Japan issued cautious statements, the EU voiced concern over democratic backsliding, and China restrained itself despite rising anti-Beijing rhetoric. While the Constitutional Court confirmed Yoon's impeachment on 4 April 2025, the crisis revealed both the resilience and vulnerability of South Korean democracy: institutional pushback blocked the self-coup, but polarisation and partisan networks in the security sector could lead to further erosion of democracy.}, keywords = {Südkorea; South Korea; politischer Konflikt; political conflict; Kriegsrecht; martial law; Innenpolitik; domestic policy; politische Krise; political crisis; Demokratie; democracy; Militär; military; Gesellschaft; society; Staat; national state; politische Entwicklung; political development}}