Towards civilian supremacy: civil-military realtions in Taiwan's democratization

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: 2003Subject(s): Online resources: In: Armed Forces and Society Vol 29 No 1, Fall 2002, pp. 57-84 (3)Abstract: While Taiwan has rapidly democratized, civil-military relations have never been viewed as an independent variable that expalins the success. Adopting Aguero's notion of civilian supremacy over the military, this article examines Taiwan's progress in the areans of political neutrality, democratic control, and social impartiality of the armed forces. As the article demonstrates, Taiwan has made considerable progress towards achieving civilian supremacy since 1987. Active military officers no longer serve in positions in the civilian government, while the armed forces no longer oversee internal security or other aspects of domestic policy. The passage of National Defence Law in 2000 and the growing oversight role of the legislative Yuan have strengthened the institutions of democratic control. Reconciliation efforts for past abuses by the armed forces and the elimination of mandatory military education programs have increased social impartiality.
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Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Journal Article Mindef Library & Info Centre Journals CIVIL MILITARY RELATIONS (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Not for loan 14443-1001

Entered on 09/APR/2003

While Taiwan has rapidly democratized, civil-military relations have never been viewed as an independent variable that expalins the success. Adopting Aguero's notion of civilian supremacy over the military, this article examines Taiwan's progress in the areans of political neutrality, democratic control, and social impartiality of the armed forces. As the article demonstrates, Taiwan has made considerable progress towards achieving civilian supremacy since 1987. Active military officers no longer serve in positions in the civilian government, while the armed forces no longer oversee internal security or other aspects of domestic policy. The passage of National Defence Law in 2000 and the growing oversight role of the legislative Yuan have strengthened the institutions of democratic control. Reconciliation efforts for past abuses by the armed forces and the elimination of mandatory military education programs have increased social impartiality.

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