How Has Higher Education Influenced the Empowerment of
Modern-Day South Korean Women?
Teri Jayun Ham
Institute of Education (IOE) at the University College London (UCL), United Kingdom (UK)
t.ham.16@ucl.ac.uk
Keywords: Gender, empowerment, higher education.
Abstract: South Korea faces a rising issue when it comes to its under-developed female labor force, but this is not due
to a lack of supply of educated women. The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization
(UNESCO) reported in 2009 that 54.7 percent of students enrolled in post-secondary non-tertiary education
were female; yet, only half of working-aged Korean women are participating in the workforce. Due to South
Korea’s low fertility rates and shrinking population, the country is on track to experience a severe shortage in
its labor force, which will only be amplified if women continue to opt out of the workforce. For these timely
and relevant socio-economic reasons, this paper will explore whether highly educated Korean women feel
that they can make empowered choices when it comes to their life choices after obtaining university degrees,
and will apply the empowerment frameworkas interpreted by Alsop and Heinsohn, as an analytical lens
used to guide the discourse.
1 INTRODUCTION
When it comes to gender parity and empowerment,
the lines can be blurry and difficult to define (Kabeer,
1999; Narayan-Parker, 2002; Rowlands, 1995). For
example, in drawing from the quote above, does Min-
Ji’s predicament reflect more a case of gender
inequality in the workplace, or a lack of individual
empowerment to overcome perceived sociocultural
and workplace barriers (Lee, 2014)? This essay will
attempt to explore such questions by examining South
Korean women who have obtained higher education
degrees. The reason for this specificity is that this
particular group of women represents a very socially
relevant and interesting backdrop for analysis.
Among all of the Organisation for Economic Co-
operation and Development (OECD) countries,
Korea has the ‘lowest employment rate of highly
educated women’ (Lee, 2014, p. 796). Only about 50
percent of working-aged women in South Korea are
participating in the workforce (KOSIS, 2017). Due to
South Korea’s low fertility rates and shrinking
population, the country is on track to experience a
severe shortage in its labor force, which will only be
amplified if women continue to opt out of the
workforce (Chang, 2003; Brender and Jeong, 2006).
For these timely and relevant socio-economic
reasons, I have chosen to take a closer look at the
barriers, forces, and other influential factors that are
causing this select group of women to make the
choices that they do. As the government looks to
identify root causes and possible solutions to address
these potentially harmful trends, I would like to offer
one analysis using a gendered lensin particular, the
empowerment frameworkas interpreted by Alsop
and Heinsohn (2005). Through their framework, the
essay will explore whether highly educated Korean
women feel that they can make empowered choices,
or exercise ‘freedom of choice and action’, when it
comes to their higher education attainment and life
after graduation (Narayan-Parker, 2002, p. v).
2 KOREA: DEVELOPMENT AND
ECONOMIC
TRANSFORMATION
To better understand how higher education, gender,
and empowerment collide in South Korea, it is
important to first gain a deeper grasp of its history,
Ham, T.
How Has Higher Education Influenced the Empowerment of Modern-Day South Korean Women?.
In Proceedings of the 1st International Conference on Educational Sciences (ICES 2017) - Volume 1, pages 29-37
ISBN: 978-989-758-314-8
Copyright © 2018 by SCITEPRESS – Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
29
and the country’s path of development over the last
50 years. In economic and political circles, South
Korea is known for its incredible story of
transformation. Within just a few decades, South
Korea was able to recover from approximately 40
years of occupational rule and a civil war to being
considered a powerhouse in many areas including
technology, research, and education (Rodrik, 1995;
Chung, 2007). For nearly four decades, Japan
occupied Korea under colonial rule from 1910 to the
end of World War II. Korea’s emancipation was
followed by the Korean War, which lasted from 1950
to 1953. After these two crushing sociopolitical
events, the global opinion was that there would be a
very long road ahead for Korea to recover
economically and reach any substantive level of
stability (Chung, 2007). To make matters worse, the
country split into two distinctive parts (the South and
the North) after the Korean War, with the North
retaining control of critical natural resources and
heavy industrial related assets (Chung, 2007). This
contributed to the South’s economic status being
lower than many sub-Saharan African countries
(Rodrik 1995), but as of 2002, South Korea was able
to expand its economy by 14-fold (Chung, 2007). So
how did South Korea rapidly rise from a war-torn
developing nation to becoming the ‘11th largest
economy’ in the world (Brender et al, 2006, p. 1)?
While the answer is multi-dimensional and complex,
academics agree that education played a pivotal role
in Korea’s rise to economic empowerment (Chung,
2007; Lee and Brinton, 1996; Rodrik, 1995).
3 HOW HAS HIGHER
EDUCATION CONTRIBUTED
TO SOUTH KOREA’
GROWTH?
While the country’s economic success cannot be
solely attributed to education, it has been touted as a
major factor in turning around the nation’s economy.
During Japan’s colonial rule, formal schooling was
restricted, which led to the population being largely
illiterate. Immediately following Korea’s
independence, national illiteracy rate levels reached
80 percent. The government’s response was to focus
on school enrolment, and by 1990 primary and
secondary school enrolments were at 90 percent (Lee
and Brinton, 1996). The government recognized early
on that they would need to lean on their skilled and
educated workforce to help transition the national
economy from an agricultural-based society to an
industrial one (Chung, 2007; Lee et al, 1996; Rodrik,
1995). Chung (2007, p. 69) points out the role higher
education played in spurring economic growth:
[South Korea] possessed a nucleus of well
trained, able, and disciplined young bureaucrats: a
large pool of collegeeducated personswith
managerial and clerical skills; literate, schooled...
It proved to be an effective strategy.
Manufacturing in South Korea increased by 200
percent from 1966 to 1985 (Chung, 2007), while
agriculture, which represented nearly 60 percent of
the workforce, declined to 21 percent by 1990 (Lee et
al, 1996). As the economic needs changed, so did the
balance of laborers versus skilled workers. By 1990,
the professional occupational workforce rose from 10
to 25 percent, and the number of professionals with
advanced degrees began to form Korea’s middle class
(Lee et al, 1996). Korea’s move to an industrial based
economy meant that the nation would need to
increasingly maintain a steady pool of highly skilled
workers (Chung, 2007), and that trend has continued.
In 2003, South Korea achieved a 98.1 percent literacy
rate, and in 2015, OECD (2015) reported that citizens
from the ages 25-64 years old with tertiary education
achieved a 77 percent employment rate
(NationMaster, 2003). But what underlying gender
and empowerment issues do these growth and
workforce attainment figures mask? That is what this
essay will seek to understand through an
empowerment focused analysis.
4 GENDER AND
EMPOWERMENT IN SOUTH
KOREA
As highlighted in the introduction, South Korea does
face a rising issue when it comes to its female labor
force, but this is not due to a lack of supply of
educated women. Although data has not been
consistently collected, United Nations Educational,
Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO,
2009) reported in 2009 that 54.7 percent of students
enrolled in post-secondary non-tertiary education
were female. Despite favorable enrolment numbers,
only ‘52.7 percent of working-aged Korean
women…[participated] in the workforce’ and the rate
for women seeking employment, among those who
were unemployed, was only 3.2 percent in 2016
(Draudt, 2016). This is particularly interesting given
the fact that in a 2003 OECD survey examining
different gender inequalities in higher education, 80
ICES 2017 - 1st International Conference on Educational Sciences
30
percent of Korean girls were ‘expecting to exercise a
highly qualified intellectual profession by the age of
30 years’ (Vincent-Lancrin, 2008, p. 10). Vincent-
Lancrin (2008) is quick to point out that while
expectations do not always equate to actions being
realized, research does show a correlation between
intention and career actualization. The reality is that
in 2012, only 34 percent of women were in job roles
that required high qualifications, and 25 percent of
women were in roles that required low or no
qualifications (OECD, 2012). It is clear that the
aspirations of young Korean girls were not translating
into careers in highly skilled professions.
Even though South Korea ranked 11th in the
world for gross domestic product (GDP) in 2015, the
country has very low Gender Empowerment Measure
(GEM) scores, which attempts to quantify
inequalities in opportunities that exist between men
and women (World Bank, 2015; Moser, 2007). In
2002’s GEM figures, South Korea ranked 60th out of
65 countries (NationMaster, 2002). Compared to the
nation’s GDP figures, Korea’s gender empowerment
has not kept pace with its rapid economic growth. In
societies where women are not being overtly
suppressed in terms of educational access, it can be
difficult to understand whether issues with
empowerment and inequality exist. In South Korea’s
case, both enrolment and attainment numbers for
women surpassed 50 percent in 2010 to 2014 (OECD,
2010-2014). Therefore, one may argue that contrary
to low GEM rankings, the nation’s educational
policies have been effective in promoting gender
equality in education. But statistics can be misleading
and do not always reveal deeper underlying issues.
5 EMPOWERMENT THEORIES
Therefore, to better understand the disparity between
economic and empowerment development, I will
apply Alsop and Heinsohn’s (2005) analytical
framework to examine a variety of cultural, social,
and political forces that may be impacting the
empowerment of women in South Korea.
In their work for the World Bank, Alsop et al
(2005, p. 5) defined empowerment as ‘enhancing an
individual’s or group’s capacity to make choices and
transform those choices into desired actions and
outcomes’. Kabeer, another widely referenced
theorist, has interpreted empowerment to be ‘the
process by which those who have been denied the
ability to make strategic life choices acquire such an
ability’ (Kabeer, 1999, p. 435). The main difference
in the two conceptualizations of empowerment is that
one focuses on the enhancement of choices made,
while Kabeer more strongly relates lack of
empowerment to individuals who were denied
opportunities to make certain choices. I have chosen
to use Alsop and Heinsohn’s adaptation because it
seems to fit South Korea’s context more, given that
Korea is no longer a developing country and does not
outright deny women access to education or the labor
market (OECD, et al).
Empowerment as a concept and theory gained
traction in 2000, when the World Bank first
highlighted it as one of their development goals
(Ivasiuc, 2013). From a development perspective,
empowerment is used as a tool in spaces where the
‘poor’ are seen to be repressed in terms of
opportunities and choice due to their low economic
standing. Non-governmental organizations (NGOs)
have found empowerment strategies to be an effective
tool in reducing gaps in access to opportunities for the
economically disadvantaged (Narayan-Parker, 2002;
Rowlands, 1995). The World Bank has deployed over
1,800 empowerment-related development projects
since 2005 (Ivasiuc, 2013). The wide usage of the
concept and framework may be attributed to its loose
definition and the fact that it is open to interpretation
and allows for flexibility. Users of the framework
may have to adjust the scope and structure according
to their context and needs, a liberty I will also take
(Alsop et al, 2005; Medel-Anonuevo, 1995; Narayan-
Parker, 2002). Although the lack of a standard
definition can be seen as a weakness, Narayan
highlights its diversity as a framework, in that it can
address multiple values, has relevance at different
levels, and can be applied to individuals or groups:
Empowerment is of intrinsic
value…instrumental value. Empowerment is
relevant at the individual and collective level, and
can be economic, social, or political. The term
can be used to characterize relations within
households or between poor people and other
actors at the global level (Narayan-Parker, 2002,
p.10).
Although Narayan (2002, p.10) and other
academics working in education, gender, and
development tend to focus on empowerment
applications around the economically disadvantaged,
I do not see claims of ‘voicelessness’ and
‘powerlessness to negotiate better terms for
themselves’ as being exclusive to the poor. These
issues of suppressed empowerment can also be
applied to varying groups of different socioeconomic
and educational levels.
How Has Higher Education Influenced the Empowerment of Modern-Day South Korean Women?
31
6 DEFINING THE FRAMEWORK
The rest of the essay will be spent using the
framework to examine the plight of educated women
in South Korea. In looking at this specific segment of
society, I will seek to understand whether these
women are making empowered choices both when
entering higher education and after graduation, or
whether their choices are being restricted by lack of
agency.
This essay will draw on a simplified version of
Alsop and Heinsohn’s (2005) framework, which
encompasses three core components: (1) agency, (2)
opportunity structure, (3) degrees of empowerment.
Although Alsop et al (2005) designed the framework
to also be used as a tool for measuring and monitoring
empowerment projects, I will apply the framework
for analytical purposes only, and therefore will only
engage with such measurement concepts as ‘domains
(state, market, society)’ and ‘levels (local
community, intermediate between community and
national levels, macro - national)’ indirectly.
Domains and levels are used to categorize defined
measurements in a linear, tabular format. As I will not
be using their empowerment table templates, I will
not directly categorize empowerment by domains and
levels, but will instead include them discreetly
throughout my analysis.
For empowerment to occur under Alsop and
Heinsohn’s (2005) framework, both agency and
opportunity structures need to be examined. In
analyzing how agency and opportunity structures
engage, degrees of empowerment can be determined.
While agency focuses on the person’s capacity to
make choices, opportunity structures are the
‘institutional context in which choice is made’ and are
assessed through formal institutions (‘laws,
regulatory frameworks’) or informational institutions
(‘norms governing behavior’ and customs) (Alsop et
al, 2005, p. 4-9). At a basic level, agency refers to
whether individuals can imagine and conceptualize
different options that they may want to pursue.
Empowerment is achieved by either an individual or
a group when they have the ability to transform their
desired choices into desirable outcomes. To help
identify if agency is occurring and to what extent,
Alsop et al created ‘asset endowments’ or
‘psychological, informational, organizational,
material, social, financial, or human’ related asset
indicators (Alsop et al, 2005, p. 8). The intention is
that these seven broad asset indicators/endowments
can be used to identify and quantify areas that affect
and limit agency. In an example that was given in
their work, they described a woman of low
socioeconomic background who was deliberating
about whether to send her daughters to school. She
was being discouraged by her husband and school
staff because they saw educating women as a waste.
This example highlighted that an informal institution
social influences limited the mother’s agency to
make an empowered choice.
7 APPLYING THE FRAMEWORK
For the purposes of this essay, I will apply Alsop et
al’s framework in the following way. I will utilize the
below three degrees of empowerment (DoE)
questions as a lens to identify ways in which agency
may be limited in informal or formal institutions
(within opportunity structures) (Alsop et al, 2005, p.
62):
(1) whether a person has the option to make a
choice
(2) whether the person decides to make use of the
option to choose
(3) whether the person achieves the desired result
after making a choice
If the framework is applied in its most standard
sense at local and intermediary (regional) levels
within market and societal domains, a quick analysis
of degrees of empowerment might look like: (1) Can
South Korean girls go into higher education yes
(OECD, et al), (2) Do South Koreans go into higher
education yes (OECD, et al), (3) Are they able to
make desired choices after graduation arguably no
(see evidence provided in section (1) DoE analysis).
However, in order to get a richer and deeper analysis,
I applied the DoE framework in a slightly different
manner. I have chosen to use the lens to assess the
empowerment of Korean women at different stages of
their lives, that being before and after higher
education attainment. Through this analysis, I will
demonstrate that while the standard application of the
framework may initially show a (3) or relatively high
level of empowerment, this may not be the case if the
context is examined through the three-part-lens that I
have framed below.
7.1 DoE Analysis: Do South Korean
Women Have the Option to Make
Educational Choices?
The concept of personal choice is not something that
is always easily discernable. How and why an
ICES 2017 - 1st International Conference on Educational Sciences
32
individual makes a choice can be linked to a number
of factors. For instance, choices can be a result of
familial, societal, and cultural influence, whether on
a conscious or subconscious level. These are just a
few of the many possible factors that lead an
individual to believe that she/he can or cannot do
something (Walker and Unterhalter, 2007).
And while tertiary attainment for women in Korea
is high, it is important to understand the underlying
influences at work as to why girls enter higher
education and choose what they study. In the Korean
context, agency appears to be affected by
psychological and social asset endowments due to
informal, cultural, and familial institutions. Even as
early as elementary school, Korean mothers are seen
as the academic caretakers/rulers of their children.
They wield tremendous power over their child’s
schooling and have an almost unhealthy focus over
their children’s’ educational journey and attainment
(Chung, Lee, H., Lee, J. and Lee, K., 2015, p. 904).
Although family structures are modernizing due to
Western influences, Confucian based practices still
dictate how families operate and make decisions
(Chang, 2003; Kyung Sup and Min Young, 2010;
Lee et al, 1996). Mothers are so concentrated on their
children’s academic performance that they often do
not know what is happening in their children’s lives
outside of school. Research has linked issues with
unhappiness and other behavioral problems in Korean
children with parents’ lack of compassion and
inability to help their children deal with the stress of
living in an ultra-competitive society (Chung et al,
2015). In this way, I see Korea’s competitive culture
as also being an inhibitor of agency, affecting girls at
psychological levels, in informal institutional
(family, societal) spaces. Overwhelming stress can
lead individuals to believe that they have no other
options and be less apt to seek out information
(another asset indicator) regarding life choices.
Another component influencing educational
choices can be linked to beliefs and norms around
marriages in Korea. Traditionally, the decision to
marry is one that is heavily influenced by both
parents. And even though families are adopting
Western ideologies, Korea has not departed from its
Confucian beliefs and traditional values still remain
prevalent in Korea’s modern society (Choi, 2011;
Kim 1996). Marriage rates for those considered of age
are at 90 percent, and parents still exercise their voice
when it comes to spousal choice. This includes having
a preference for daughter-in-laws who take charge of
household chores. And if they do enter the workforce,
careers in teaching/education are seen as highly
desirable (Choi, 2011). A successful marriage, which
is the goal of Korean parents, is often tied to social
status, high levels of education, and profession
(Chang, 2003; Choi, 2011). In 2005, 71 percent of
women graduated with education degrees,
representing a 0.1 percent change since 1998
(Vincent-Lancrin, 2008). Therefore, it could be
presumed from the aforementioned observations that
parents are exercising an unhealthy amount of
influence over their children’s way of thinking
(psychological and information asset indicators) and
decision-making processes and are either using
education as a vehicle for securing more attractive
marriages for their daughters and/or are influencing
their daughters to adopt these values into their own
belief systems.
Agency entails individuals first contemplating
different options and then making decisions about
which choices they want to make. While it is true that
there are no apparent formal institutions limiting
agency, like laws or regulatory frameworks, this does
not necessarily mean that empowered decisions are
being made. I would argue that if Korea’s female
graduates were truly empowered, then it would
appeal to common reasoning that the distribution of
degree choice would be more diversely spread out
across different types of fields, and not overly
concentrated on education. Girls may be so
indoctrinated by informal institutions like familial,
societal, and cultural pressures from a young age that
they may not be able to discern their own personal
preferences from what they were ‘informed’ to
believe. For full agency to occur, individuals should
bear the responsibility of setting life-goals for
themselves based on their preferences and should not
be unduly influenced or indoctrinated to choose one
path over another by other groups or norms (Walker
et al, 2007).
7.2 DoE Analysis: Do South Korean
Women Make Use of Their Option
to Choose?
The next question I will examine is, once women
receive their degrees, are they exercising higher
degrees of empowerment and ‘making use of their
option to choose’ (Alsop et al, 2005, p. 62)?
As stated in the introduction, among all OECD
countries South Korea has the smallest number of
educated females entering the labor force of all of the
countries assessed (Lee, 2014). Data has shown that
Korean women are not leveraging their degrees after
graduation and instead choose to get married and stay
at home (Chang, 2003). Being a stay at home wife or
mom certainly does not preclude someone from being
How Has Higher Education Influenced the Empowerment of Modern-Day South Korean Women?
33
empowered. If a woman desires to be a stay-at-home
mom over other options, including a career, then that,
too, can be an empowered choice. But when half of
Korea’s degree-holding female eligible labor force is
opting out of the workforce, then one may draw the
conclusion that empowered choices are not being
made (Draudt, 2016; KOSIS, 2017).
So what factors might be limiting agency? The
first informal institution limiting capacity of choice
can again be traced back to ‘patriarchal Confucian
culture’ which calls for the wife and/or mother to be
the main caretaker of the family and household, even
at the expense of her own career aspirations (Kim,
1996; Lee, 2014, p. 794). For decades, the patriarchal
ideology and Confucian roots were commonplace not
only in the home, but also permeated into the
workplace. While the women stayed at home, over 92
percent of male university graduates entered the
workforce. This created an unfair imbalance of
suitable jobs that were left for women. Female
graduates found themselves competing for secretary-
type roles, non-leadership positions, or jobs outside
of their degree of study (Lee, 2014). Between 2003
and 2008, the highest level of attainment of women
reaching managerial roles was 5 percent and the
highest level of attainment of women in professional
job roles was 10 percent (OECD, 2003-2008).
However, over time, this quandary of ‘uninteresting’
and ‘unchallenging jobs’, coupled with lack of
upward mobility in the workforce, created new spaces
of empowered thinking.
As women began to become more frustrated with
their predicaments and lack of agency, new trends
around marriage began manifesting. As modern
influences challenged core traditional societal values
more and more, women began to have new reactions
to their prolonged suppression of freedom and
agency. With gender discrimination in the workforce
beginning to improve, more women began to choose
to stay single, rebelling against informal opportunity
structures such as religious, societal, and cultural
norms. These shifts resulted in opening up more
opportunities for women to leverage their education
to become more financially self-sufficient (thus
positively influencing financial, psychological, and
social asset indicators). Women now wanted to wait
for the ‘right partner’ rather than engaging in an
unfulfilling marriage based on societal-prescribed
notions. This trend became so prevalent that a new
term ‘bihonyeoseong (non-marrying women) [was]
coined to describe the single women for whom
marriage is just a matter of personal choice’ (Chang,
2003, p. 603; Choi, 2011). And for those women who
were already married, some began to go against
Confucian ideals by separating or divorcing (Kyung
Sup et al, 2010; Lee, 2014). It can be argued that these
new trends represented informational, psychological,
social, and financial asset endowments. New Western
and modern ideologies (informational) influenced
how women valued themselves (psychological), and
inspired them to challenge traditional beliefs (social).
Gender-friendly changes in the workplace (informal
structure) opened up new opportunities and affected
women’s choices around money and independence
(financial and social) (Alsop et al, 2005; Kyung Sup
et al, 2010).
Up until now, evidence to support informal related
opportunity structures has mainly been highlighted,
but these next few paragraphs will discuss some
formal institutions that can be seen as empowerment
influencers.
South Korea has made a concerted effort to build
a global reputation around their universities and
research. To bolster such aims, the government made
several major moves in the hopes of increasing their
university ranks including: (1) the Brain Korea 21, a
seven-year $2 billion program that was launched by
the Ministry of Education to promote academic-
industry relationships and capacity building, (2)
Internationalization and globalization policies to
promote the hiring of foreign professors and attract
foreign students, (3) Additional policies to counter
the fact that only 15.6 percent of Korea’s academic
positions were filled by women (Brender et al, 2006;
Kim, 2005). Despite these well-intentioned
initiatives, lack of enforcement around hiring-related
policies resulted in only a handful of foreign hires out
of the 400+ budgeted. The government had hoped that
the above initiatives would push universities from
their traditional ways of thinking to a more
democratic system. However, in reality, the policies
proved to be ineffective.
Although formal institutions intended to create
opportunity structures for women to make more
empowered decisions about their educational and
career choices, the new regulations and proposed
projects failed to overcome stronger informal social
and cultural related institutions. Korea’s traditional
cultural influences and Confucian ideology were too
deep-rooted and pervasive to allow for drastic change
within academic institutions (Brender et al, 2006;
Kim, 2005). With such a shortage of academic female
role models, it makes sense why female students were
not empowered to pursue higher education leadership
positions and overcome organizational (in
universities) and social (Confucian ideology) barriers
to full agency. Female academics were often
relegated to the periphery and held too little power to
ICES 2017 - 1st International Conference on Educational Sciences
34
instigate any real progress or change (Kim 2005).
Even the male professors who studied and lived
abroad did little to influence culture as they often
became more nationalistic upon return (Brender et al,
2006; Kim, 2005). Korea has been long known as a
homogeneous nation in terms of population and social
and cultural practices (Kyung-Koo, 2007). I believe
that this is an area of focus that the government must
continue to pursue if they want to see lasting and
substantial changes in empowerment of the female
population. As long as the males rooted in traditional
ideals continue to dominate teaching, academic, and
leadership positions, it is unlikely that homogeneous
molds in thinking, pedagogy, and content within
academic institutions will change (Kyung-Koo, 2007;
Moser, 2007). As pointed out by Jones, Presler-
Marshall, and Van Anh (2016, p. 552) empowerment
needs to be about changing belief-systems, not just
behaviors. For women to be able to exercise and
leverage their human asset endowment of education,
changes need to be made in informal related
opportunity structures in universities to match formal
institutional changes (Alsop et al, 2005). Instead of
training girls how to not make empowered decisions,
educational institutions with the right leadership and
content can just as easily teach girls what empowered
thinking means and how to go about making newly
empowered decisions moving forward.
7.3 DoE Analysis: Do South Korean
Women Achieve their Desired
Result After Making their Choice?
This question brings to the forefront a new trend that
is gaining momentum among the intellectually elite.
Dissatisfied with their situation after making certain
life choices, frustrated housewives who feel under-
utilized and who were begrudgingly forced into roles
of motherhood and marriage are looking for new
ways to fulfill themselves (Chang, 2013; Choi, 2011;
Lee, 2014). A group of women known as ‘mature
students’ (students older than 25) are now seeking to
exercise their agency to ‘correct’ or ‘make-up for’
unempowered choices they made earlier in life (Lee,
2014, p.794). Discontent housewives are now
choosing to exercise their agency by complementing
their higher degrees with further learning. Some are
returning to school to make up for missed
opportunities to attend university, due to marrying at
a young age, while other women are motivated by the
fact that less gender discrimination happens in
classrooms than it does in the workplace, and lastly
some women are hoping that further education will
lead to better careers and higher salaries (Lee, 2014).
Going back to Kabeer’s (1999) focus of denied
opportunities, it can be argued that when these
women looked back at their younger selves, they saw
themselves as having been deprived of agency.
Rather than let opportunity structures continue to
inhibit their agency, these intellectually elite women
found empowerment within themselves to make new
decisions and finally explore other alternative
lifestyles and career choices that they may initially
have thought were closed to them due to familial
responsibilities and social and cultural norms (Alsop
et al, 2005). In these cases, lack of agency and
freedom has actually triggered a level of
discontentment that has motivated women to change
their situation and trajectory and make empowered
decisions that are more closely representative of their
capabilities and desires (Lee 2014). This nicely
reinforces Heise’s supposition (in Jones, et al, 2016,
p. 541) that ‘it is easier to build new norms than it is
to eliminate old ones’.
8 CONCLUSIONS
The intent of this essay was to question to what extent
South Korean women were able to make empowered
choices concerning their higher education attainment
and life after schooling through an adapted version of
Alsop and Heinsohn’s (2015) empowerment
framework. Through this analysis, the essay
discovered that, generally speaking, young girls
experienced limited agency and therefore lacked
empowerment when it came to their educational
choices and paths. Girls were so influenced by
familial pressures and social and indoctrinated
cultural ideologies that they opted out of the
workforce due to marriage or motherly duties after
graduation, without much regard to alternative
possibilities.
At a national level, the Korean government tried
to rectify poor gender parity trends, specifically in
universities, by implementing measures and
programming that promoted culture and gender
diversity. Unfortunately, due to weak enforcement,
not much improvement resulted.
One of the surprising points the analysis
uncovered was that years of suppressed
empowerment actually instigated women to make
empowered decisions later in life. Wives and mothers
frustrated with their previous lack of empowered
decisions sought out other alternatives, like divorce,
new career aspirations, and even going back to school
to receive more education. This trend also resulted in
empowering younger generations by spurring a
How Has Higher Education Influenced the Empowerment of Modern-Day South Korean Women?
35
movement where women could choose to rebel
against cultural and social stigmas and remain single,
giving them the freedom to choose opportunities
more in line with their desires. It is important to note
that due to the brevity of this essay, not all influencers
of agency were examined. The examples highlighted
here were chosen to shed light on how multi-
dimensional empowerment issues are, and how they
are not necessarily static in nature.
With the economic development of Korea being
so rapid, it may not be fair to expect that all social
areas like gender empowerment would keep pace,
especially when empowerment may not translate
organically both linguistically or culturally into all
societies (Narayan-Parker, 2002). Therefore, while
drastic improvements in empowerment have not been
made in Korea, it is encouraging that women,
especially later on in life, are demonstrating more
empowered decision making and creating new norms
for empowerment.
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