Constitutional Struggles and the Court in Indonesia’s Turn to Authoritarian Politics

Indonesia’s politics has changed dramatically during Jokowi’s administration. Numbers of scholars argued this situation turns to a ‘new model of authoritarianism’ or declining democracy. The situation is generally referred to as the strengthening of authoritarian politics. Meanwhile, in such situati...

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Main Author: Wiratraman, Herlambang P.
Format: Article PeerReviewed
Language:English
Published: Australian National University, College of Law 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://repository.ugm.ac.id/284061/1/Constitutional-Struggles-and-the-Court-in-Indonesias-Turn-to-Authoritarian-PoliticsFederal-Law-Review.pdf
https://repository.ugm.ac.id/284061/
https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/0067205X221107404
https://doi.org/10.1177/0067205X221107404
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spelling id-ugm-repo.2840612023-11-28T00:51:50Z https://repository.ugm.ac.id/284061/ Constitutional Struggles and the Court in Indonesia’s Turn to Authoritarian Politics Wiratraman, Herlambang P. Law and Legal Studies Indonesia’s politics has changed dramatically during Jokowi’s administration. Numbers of scholars argued this situation turns to a ‘new model of authoritarianism’ or declining democracy. The situation is generally referred to as the strengthening of authoritarian politics. Meanwhile, in such situation, the role of the judiciary is the key to balancing power in authoritarian politics. However, in reality, efforts to encourage constitutional struggle through the judiciary will easily reverse the situation to lose its independence. The court could play a significant role in authoritarian politics. This phenomenon has been called the ‘judicialisation of authoritarian politics’. This article dissects how the process of authoritarian political institutionalisation through law and the courts has occurred in the two decades after Suharto’s reforms. Then it examines how civil society changes and the democracy movement have made it possible to advance constitutional rights in the context of Indonesia’s cartel politics and the judicialisation of authoritarian politics. The legal argument for such judicial practice is that authoritarianism has been increasingly institutionalised, facilitating oligarchy networks in a cartelised political system, so that law and the judiciary merely work to strengthen the chain of impunity. Australian National University, College of Law 2022-09 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en https://repository.ugm.ac.id/284061/1/Constitutional-Struggles-and-the-Court-in-Indonesias-Turn-to-Authoritarian-PoliticsFederal-Law-Review.pdf Wiratraman, Herlambang P. (2022) Constitutional Struggles and the Court in Indonesia’s Turn to Authoritarian Politics. Federal Law Review, 50 (3). pp. 314-330. ISSN 0067205X https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/0067205X221107404 https://doi.org/10.1177/0067205X221107404
institution Universitas Gadjah Mada
building UGM Library
continent Asia
country Indonesia
Indonesia
content_provider UGM Library
collection Repository Civitas UGM
language English
topic Law and Legal Studies
spellingShingle Law and Legal Studies
Wiratraman, Herlambang P.
Constitutional Struggles and the Court in Indonesia’s Turn to Authoritarian Politics
description Indonesia’s politics has changed dramatically during Jokowi’s administration. Numbers of scholars argued this situation turns to a ‘new model of authoritarianism’ or declining democracy. The situation is generally referred to as the strengthening of authoritarian politics. Meanwhile, in such situation, the role of the judiciary is the key to balancing power in authoritarian politics. However, in reality, efforts to encourage constitutional struggle through the judiciary will easily reverse the situation to lose its independence. The court could play a significant role in authoritarian politics. This phenomenon has been called the ‘judicialisation of authoritarian politics’. This article dissects how the process of authoritarian political institutionalisation through law and the courts has occurred in the two decades after Suharto’s reforms. Then it examines how civil society changes and the democracy movement have made it possible to advance constitutional rights in the context of Indonesia’s cartel politics and the judicialisation of authoritarian politics. The legal argument for such judicial practice is that authoritarianism has been increasingly institutionalised, facilitating oligarchy networks in a cartelised political system, so that law and the judiciary merely work to strengthen the chain of impunity.
format Article
PeerReviewed
author Wiratraman, Herlambang P.
author_facet Wiratraman, Herlambang P.
author_sort Wiratraman, Herlambang P.
title Constitutional Struggles and the Court in Indonesia’s Turn to Authoritarian Politics
title_short Constitutional Struggles and the Court in Indonesia’s Turn to Authoritarian Politics
title_full Constitutional Struggles and the Court in Indonesia’s Turn to Authoritarian Politics
title_fullStr Constitutional Struggles and the Court in Indonesia’s Turn to Authoritarian Politics
title_full_unstemmed Constitutional Struggles and the Court in Indonesia’s Turn to Authoritarian Politics
title_sort constitutional struggles and the court in indonesia’s turn to authoritarian politics
publisher Australian National University, College of Law
publishDate 2022
url https://repository.ugm.ac.id/284061/1/Constitutional-Struggles-and-the-Court-in-Indonesias-Turn-to-Authoritarian-PoliticsFederal-Law-Review.pdf
https://repository.ugm.ac.id/284061/
https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/0067205X221107404
https://doi.org/10.1177/0067205X221107404
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