Reconstituting the disarticulated political space of authoritarian breakdown is anything but straightforward. Distinct trade-offs and ambiguous outcomes are all too familiar. This is in no small part because political change involves compromise with an authoritarian past. The very fact of this transition dynamic leaves us with more questions than answers about the process of democratization. In particular, it is important to ask how we go about interpreting ambiguity in the study of democratization. The following article argues that the way we frame democratization is struggling to come to terms with the ambiguity of contemporary political change. Taking Indonesia as an example, the article maps a tension between authoritarianism and subseq...
This chapter explores the existing connections between Indonesia’s process of democratization, its e...
In the last decade, autocrats and democrats alike have used a wide range of innovative illiberal met...
The state of democracy in the Global South is marked by a striking paradox: while liberal democracy ...
There is ready agreement that countries do not emerge in straightforward transitions from authoritar...
There is already agreement that countries do not emerge in straightforward transitions from authorit...
In 1998, following Soeharto's demise, Indonesia underwent a transition from authoritarian rule amids...
This book establishes that a tension exists between how we frame democratisation and the conclusions...
Are Asian democracies deconsolidating, in line with world-wide trends? This article exam...
An often-acknowledged characteristic of the late twentieth century has been the expansion of ‘democr...
Many Indonesians who welcomed the nation’s democratisation in 1998 now look on democracy with horror...
As norms and mechanisms, democracy has been set in place and the democratic political system is in o...
This paper aims to analyse why Indonesia projects democracy as a state identity by taking on the rol...
Democratisation in post-Suharto Indonesia has significantly improved political participation, liftin...
This study examines the interaction between the pro-democratic movement and the authoritarian milita...
No abstractThe article refers to democratic transition by regime transformation. Starting with a def...
This chapter explores the existing connections between Indonesia’s process of democratization, its e...
In the last decade, autocrats and democrats alike have used a wide range of innovative illiberal met...
The state of democracy in the Global South is marked by a striking paradox: while liberal democracy ...
There is ready agreement that countries do not emerge in straightforward transitions from authoritar...
There is already agreement that countries do not emerge in straightforward transitions from authorit...
In 1998, following Soeharto's demise, Indonesia underwent a transition from authoritarian rule amids...
This book establishes that a tension exists between how we frame democratisation and the conclusions...
Are Asian democracies deconsolidating, in line with world-wide trends? This article exam...
An often-acknowledged characteristic of the late twentieth century has been the expansion of ‘democr...
Many Indonesians who welcomed the nation’s democratisation in 1998 now look on democracy with horror...
As norms and mechanisms, democracy has been set in place and the democratic political system is in o...
This paper aims to analyse why Indonesia projects democracy as a state identity by taking on the rol...
Democratisation in post-Suharto Indonesia has significantly improved political participation, liftin...
This study examines the interaction between the pro-democratic movement and the authoritarian milita...
No abstractThe article refers to democratic transition by regime transformation. Starting with a def...
This chapter explores the existing connections between Indonesia’s process of democratization, its e...
In the last decade, autocrats and democrats alike have used a wide range of innovative illiberal met...
The state of democracy in the Global South is marked by a striking paradox: while liberal democracy ...