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2019 Indonesia Update: From stagnation to regression? Indonesian democracy after twenty years

Crawford School of Public Policy | Arndt-Corden Department of Economics | Indonesia Project

Event details

Update

Date & time

Friday 06 September 2019 to Saturday 07 September 2019
9.00am–2.00pm

Venue

Coombs Lecture Theatre, H C Coombs Building 9, Cnr Fellows Road and Garran Road, ANU

Speaker

Edward Aspinall (ANU), Diego Fossati (City University of Hong Kong), Sana Jaffrey (The University of Chicago), Nava Nuraniyah (Institute for Policy Analysis of Conflict) and many more

Contacts

Indonesia Project
+61 2 6125 5954

To download the program and find out more information about the Indonesia Update, please click here.

Indonesia is a rare case of democratic transition and persistence in Southeast Asia. But like many other countries around the world, Indonesia’s democracy increasingly shows signs of fragility and even regression.

In recent years there has been a rise in authoritarian populism, arbitrary state crackdowns on freedom of speech and organisation, and a deterioration in the protection of minority rights. There are more deep-seated problems too: corruption, clientelism, unequal access to legal protection and redress, under-representation of lower-class and minority voices, and growing support for religious majoritarianism amongst the political class.

Many symptoms of democratic fragility were first diagnosed during the second term of President Yudhoyono (2009-2014); but to the surprise of many observers, the most dramatic decline in democratic quality has occurred on President Jokowi’s watch (2014-).

To be sure, Indonesia has a well-earned reputation as the region’s most vibrant democracy. There is much to celebrate about what Indonesia has achieved over the past two decades since Suharto’s authoritarian regime was dismantled. But the warning signs require urgent analytical attention. Cases like the Philippines and Turkey provide powerful reminders that once-stable democracies can deteriorate quickly in the hands of democratically-elected leaders.

This conference examines the quality of Indonesian democracy. The contributors will identify, assess and debate the signs of democratic backsliding across a range of political and institutional contexts. They will do so with a view not just to assessing Indonesia’s democratic evolution over time, but also to situating Indonesia in the context of a global democratic recession.

The conference is free of charge Conference convenors

Thomas Power The Australian National University thomas.power@anu.edu.au

Eve Warburton The Australian National University The National University of Singapore evewarburton@gmail.com Conference administrator

Indonesia Project The Arndt-Corden Department of Economics ANU College of Asia and the Pacific Canberra ACT 2601 AUSTRALIA indonesia.project@anu.edu.au +61 2 6125 5954, +61 2 6125 3794

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