
South Korea's first lady problem: plagiarism, privilege and Kim Keon-hee
When a top private university revoked the master's degree of
South Korea 's former first lady for plagiarism this week, it was more than just another routine academic scandal – it was a signal that the days of unchecked privilege for political spouses may be over.
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On Monday, Sookmyung Women's University announced it had annulled the art education degree awarded to Kim Keon-hee in 1999 – submitted under her previous name, Kim Myung-shin – after its research ethics panel found the thesis was so seriously compromised that cancellation was warranted.
For many critics, the decision was long overdue. Yet it also marks a watershed moment: a sign of rising public demand for transparency and consequences not just for elected officials, but for those who orbit them. The fallout, political analysts say, could redefine the expectations placed on future first ladies in a country where unofficial power has long operated outside formal scrutiny.
'It's rare in modern political history for a leader's spouse to remain so prominently and persistently at the centre of controversy,' Choi Jin, head of the Institute for Presidential Leadership, told This Week in Asia. 'From now on, the public will be watching not just elected officials, but their families too.'
Kim, the embattled wife of impeached former president
Yoon Suk-yeol , has faced mounting legal and political pressure in recent months. The university's move comes after years of accusations that it had hesitated to act, despite public uproar and findings that nearly half of her thesis had been plagiarised.
Former South Korean president Yoon Suk-yeol and his wife Kim Keon-hee are facing multiple investigations over alleged offences ranging from stock manipulation to political interference. Photo: AFP
'This decision was made to uphold research ethics and reinforce academic integrity,' the university said in a statement.
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