Stagnated Democracy: The Rise of Formal Democracy in the Wake of Oligarchy Rules and Weak Pro-Democracy Movements

This chapter will discuss the latest developments in democracy in Indonesia. The aim is to outline the context of the politics of citizenship studied in this volume, as the ongoing democratisation process is the basis of, and in turn shaped by, various struggles for citizenship rights. This chapter...

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Main Author: Hiariej, Eric
Format: Book PeerReviewed
Language:English
Published: Springer 2022
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Online Access:https://repository.ugm.ac.id/282706/1/978-981-16-7955-1.pdf
https://repository.ugm.ac.id/282706/
https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-981-16-7955-1_4
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spelling id-ugm-repo.2827062023-11-16T04:49:05Z https://repository.ugm.ac.id/282706/ Stagnated Democracy: The Rise of Formal Democracy in the Wake of Oligarchy Rules and Weak Pro-Democracy Movements Hiariej, Eric Democracy Local Politics This chapter will discuss the latest developments in democracy in Indonesia. The aim is to outline the context of the politics of citizenship studied in this volume, as the ongoing democratisation process is the basis of, and in turn shaped by, various struggles for citizenship rights. This chapter argues that the widely praised and celebrated democracy in Indonesia is currently stagnated. Despite a relatively stable political transition, successful instalment of core democratic institutions, high economic growth, and increasing freedom and liberty, problems such as corruption and other power abuse, poor welfare provision, and violence against minorities are holding back the democratisation process. At the centre of this stagnation is a weak popular representation in which the general populace hardly make better use of democracy to pursue their interests. The democratisation process, realised through a combination of moderate elite pacts and developing core rules and regulations, has produced merely a formal democracy that benefits elite the most, has yet to significantly challenge the power of oligarchy, and lacks sufficient political capacity for civil and popular groups to overcome the problem of weak representation. In this regard, the politics of citizenship in Indonesia should be better understood and debated against the relatively successful rise of formal democracy, the continuing grip of oligarchy, and the poor capacity of civil society- and popular sector-based activists in promoting democracy. © The Editor(s) (if applicable) and The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Singapore Pte Ltd. 2022. Springer 2022 Book PeerReviewed application/pdf en https://repository.ugm.ac.id/282706/1/978-981-16-7955-1.pdf Hiariej, Eric (2022) Stagnated Democracy: The Rise of Formal Democracy in the Wake of Oligarchy Rules and Weak Pro-Democracy Movements. Springer, 63 – 87. https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-981-16-7955-1_4
institution Universitas Gadjah Mada
building UGM Library
continent Asia
country Indonesia
Indonesia
content_provider UGM Library
collection Repository Civitas UGM
language English
topic Democracy
Local Politics
spellingShingle Democracy
Local Politics
Hiariej, Eric
Stagnated Democracy: The Rise of Formal Democracy in the Wake of Oligarchy Rules and Weak Pro-Democracy Movements
description This chapter will discuss the latest developments in democracy in Indonesia. The aim is to outline the context of the politics of citizenship studied in this volume, as the ongoing democratisation process is the basis of, and in turn shaped by, various struggles for citizenship rights. This chapter argues that the widely praised and celebrated democracy in Indonesia is currently stagnated. Despite a relatively stable political transition, successful instalment of core democratic institutions, high economic growth, and increasing freedom and liberty, problems such as corruption and other power abuse, poor welfare provision, and violence against minorities are holding back the democratisation process. At the centre of this stagnation is a weak popular representation in which the general populace hardly make better use of democracy to pursue their interests. The democratisation process, realised through a combination of moderate elite pacts and developing core rules and regulations, has produced merely a formal democracy that benefits elite the most, has yet to significantly challenge the power of oligarchy, and lacks sufficient political capacity for civil and popular groups to overcome the problem of weak representation. In this regard, the politics of citizenship in Indonesia should be better understood and debated against the relatively successful rise of formal democracy, the continuing grip of oligarchy, and the poor capacity of civil society- and popular sector-based activists in promoting democracy. © The Editor(s) (if applicable) and The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Singapore Pte Ltd. 2022.
format Book
PeerReviewed
author Hiariej, Eric
author_facet Hiariej, Eric
author_sort Hiariej, Eric
title Stagnated Democracy: The Rise of Formal Democracy in the Wake of Oligarchy Rules and Weak Pro-Democracy Movements
title_short Stagnated Democracy: The Rise of Formal Democracy in the Wake of Oligarchy Rules and Weak Pro-Democracy Movements
title_full Stagnated Democracy: The Rise of Formal Democracy in the Wake of Oligarchy Rules and Weak Pro-Democracy Movements
title_fullStr Stagnated Democracy: The Rise of Formal Democracy in the Wake of Oligarchy Rules and Weak Pro-Democracy Movements
title_full_unstemmed Stagnated Democracy: The Rise of Formal Democracy in the Wake of Oligarchy Rules and Weak Pro-Democracy Movements
title_sort stagnated democracy: the rise of formal democracy in the wake of oligarchy rules and weak pro-democracy movements
publisher Springer
publishDate 2022
url https://repository.ugm.ac.id/282706/1/978-981-16-7955-1.pdf
https://repository.ugm.ac.id/282706/
https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-981-16-7955-1_4
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