Explaining South Korea's COVID-19 Response through Various Levels of the Institution
- Abstract
- Institutional infrastructure provides a context for leadership to implement its policies.
Yet prior studies on South Korea's successful COVID-19 response have focused primarily on the administration's leadership, the Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency (KDCA), and the learning effects from Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS). Using South Korea as a case study, this paper introduces a theoretical framework that captures various institutional determinants to explain its COVID-19 response. Applying Williamson's (2000) theoretical framework on the four layers of social institutions, we show how two institutional infrastructures—Confucian and collective norms and legacies of the business-government networks—may have contributed to South Korea's COVID-19 response through policy compliance, supportive R&D policies and inter-ministry collaboration. One of the key implications of our research lies in the learning effects of MERS, which may have been limited without institutional infrastructure like business-government networks.
- Issued Date
- 2023
Lee Hyobin
Kee Hoon Chung
- Type
- Article
- Keyword
- COVID-19; South Korea; Institutional Infrastructure; the Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency; MERS
- DOI
- 10.29152/KOIKS.2023.54.2.205
- URI
- https://oak.ulsan.ac.kr/handle/2021.oak/17419
- Publisher
- Korea Observer
- Language
- 영어
- ISSN
- 0023-3919
- Citation Volume
- 54
- Citation Number
- 2
- Citation Start Page
- 205
- Citation End Page
- 225
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Appears in Collections:
- Social Science > Social Science
- 공개 및 라이선스
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