Page range: 61-92The fall of Indonesia’s New Order regime set the stage for more competitive elections, but not necessarily for more competitive elites. Party and military leaders have primarily responded to democratic transition by sharing power rather than competing for it, especially by ensuring that all major political groupings enjoy lucrative and powerful positions in the cabinet. The recent introduction of direct presidential elections has inadvertently threatened to unsettle this cozy and collusive elite arrangement—but only at the risk of restoring dangerous patterns of presidential domination
The outside world should be worried by the possibility that Prabowo Subianto could become Indonesian...
In late July 2001, Indonesia�s democratic experiment appeared to come to a dramatic end. While the p...
The victory of President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono’s Democratic Party in the parliamentary elections ...
Page range: 1-22This article recaps the events that led to the ouster of Akbar Tandjung from the cha...
Indonesian democracy experienced a near miss in 2014, when Jakarta governor Joko Widodo (Jokowi) def...
Political scientists have recently debated the extent to which strong state capacity helps authorita...
Page range: 131-164There is little consensus on the character of the Indonesia’s democracy. One comm...
Indonesia is the world’s largest Muslim-majority country. It is of immense importance for the securi...
As Indonesia’s increasingly authoritarian populist president Jokowi began his second term in autumn ...
Indonesia has had ten years of constitutional democracy since the end of the Suharto era. In 2009 th...
Contents: Megawati takes power with army backing -- Aceh sinks deeper into war -- Peace talks sabota...
This article examines the decline of Indonesia' s democratic institutions under President Joko Widod...
Two sides of the debate on Indonesia\u27s future turn on the tension between sustained economic grow...
Addressing the Sixth assembly of the World Movement for Democracy in Jakarta in April 2010, Indonesi...
The victory of President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono’s Democratic Party in the parliamentary elections ...
The outside world should be worried by the possibility that Prabowo Subianto could become Indonesian...
In late July 2001, Indonesia�s democratic experiment appeared to come to a dramatic end. While the p...
The victory of President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono’s Democratic Party in the parliamentary elections ...
Page range: 1-22This article recaps the events that led to the ouster of Akbar Tandjung from the cha...
Indonesian democracy experienced a near miss in 2014, when Jakarta governor Joko Widodo (Jokowi) def...
Political scientists have recently debated the extent to which strong state capacity helps authorita...
Page range: 131-164There is little consensus on the character of the Indonesia’s democracy. One comm...
Indonesia is the world’s largest Muslim-majority country. It is of immense importance for the securi...
As Indonesia’s increasingly authoritarian populist president Jokowi began his second term in autumn ...
Indonesia has had ten years of constitutional democracy since the end of the Suharto era. In 2009 th...
Contents: Megawati takes power with army backing -- Aceh sinks deeper into war -- Peace talks sabota...
This article examines the decline of Indonesia' s democratic institutions under President Joko Widod...
Two sides of the debate on Indonesia\u27s future turn on the tension between sustained economic grow...
Addressing the Sixth assembly of the World Movement for Democracy in Jakarta in April 2010, Indonesi...
The victory of President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono’s Democratic Party in the parliamentary elections ...
The outside world should be worried by the possibility that Prabowo Subianto could become Indonesian...
In late July 2001, Indonesia�s democratic experiment appeared to come to a dramatic end. While the p...
The victory of President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono’s Democratic Party in the parliamentary elections ...