Abstract

In modern society, a sustainable society has become a value pursued by all organizations, from households to businesses to governments. Corruption is a kind of cancer that hinders the sustainable development of organizations beyond space and times. The Internal Control System is a system to prevent and block intentional corruption by internal members of the organization and a transparency system to prevent unintended errors. This thesis is a study to investigate the system continuity of the Joseon Dynasty, which established a single state system from 1392 to its forced annexation by Japanese imperialism in 1910, focusing on the internal control system. So far, the long-term sustainability of the Joseon Dynasty has not been illuminated in a positive light, but instead has been illuminated as a ‘dynasty to have to perish’ that changes only by external shocks. In this paper, the anti-corruption system established during the reign of King Sejong in the 15th century is illuminated as an internal control system that has emerged as a modern accounting system, and by presenting the characteristics of the continuity of the Joseon system, which has maintained a single state system for about 600 years, A future alternative to a possible national system is sought in the 15th century Sejong era.

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