Democracy in Indonesia : from stagnation to regression? / Edited by Thomas Power, Eve Warburton
จำนวนหน้า
1 online resource (419 pages)
ชื่อชุด
Indonesia Update Series
หมายเหตุบรรณานุกรม
Includes bibliographical references and index.
หมายเหตุสารบัญ
Democracy in Indonesia: from stagnation to regression? -- Contents -- Tables and figures -- Contributors -- Foreword: Is Indonesian democracy in decline? -- Acknowledgments -- Glossary -- 1. The decline of Indonesian democracy by Thomas Power and Eve Warburton -- Part 1: Historical and Comparative Perspectives -- 2. Indonesias democracy in a comparative perspective by Allen Hicken -- 3. Indonesias tenuous democratic success and survival by Dan Slater -- Part 2: Polarisation and Populism -- 4. How polarised is Indonesia and why does it matter? by Eve Warburton -- 5. Divided Muslims: militant pluralism, polarisation and democratic backsliding by Nava Nuraniyah -- 6. Is populism a threat to Indonesian democracy? by Liam Gammon -- 7. Islamic populism and Indonesias illiberal democracy by Abdil Mughis Mudhoffir -- Part 3: Popular Support for Democracy -- 8. Electoral losers, democratic support and authoritarian nostalgia by Burhanuddin Muhtadi -- 9. How popular conceptions of democracy shape democratic support in Indonesia by Diego Fossati and Ferran Martinez i Coma -- Part 4: Democratic Institutions -- 10. Indonesian parties revisited: systemic exclusivism, electoral personalisation and declining intraparty democracy by Marcus Mietzner -- 11. The media and democratic decline by Ross Tapsell -- 12. The economic dimensions of Indonesias democratic quality: a subnational approach by Puspa Delima Amri and Mochamad Pasha -- 13. A state of surveillance? Freedom of expression under the Jokowi presidency by Ken M.P. Setiawan -- Part 5: Law, Security and Disorder -- 14. Assailing accountability: law enforcement politicisation, partisan coercion and executive aggrandisement under the Jokowi administration by Thomas P. Power -- 15. In the states stead? Vigilantism and policing of religious offence in Indonesia by Sana Jaffrey -- 16. Rumour, identity and violence in contemporary Indonesia: evidence from elections in West Kalimantan by Irsyad Rafsadie, Dyah Ayu Kartika, Siswo Mulyartono -- 17. Electoral violence in Indonesia 20 years after reformasi by Risa J. Toha and S.P. Harish -- Index -- Indonesia Update Series.
สาระสังเขป
In 2004, Indonesia had a second democratic election, which was also conducted in a peaceful and orderly manner. This book discusses Indonesia's transition towards democracy through the parliamentary and presidential elections, including an analysis of party activity in the provinces, in 2004.