Indonesian politics in 2011: democratic regression and Yudhoyono's regal incumbency

In 2011, a number of trends in Indonesian politics became clearer. President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono (SBY) has not become a more reformist and risk-taking president in his second term, contrary to the hopes of many, but has rather become more cautious, aloof and regal in style. He is irked by criti...

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Veröffentlicht in:Bulletin of Indonesian economic studies 2011-12, Vol.47 (3), p.333-353
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description In 2011, a number of trends in Indonesian politics became clearer. President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono (SBY) has not become a more reformist and risk-taking president in his second term, contrary to the hopes of many, but has rather become more cautious, aloof and regal in style. He is irked by criticism and dislikes any disturbance to the authority of his rule. The political elite, often in concert with the SBY government, pushed through a range of democratically regressive measures, including allowing politicians to be appointed to the Elections Commission. The malaise within the party system deepened, with less than a quarter of the electorate professing any party affiliation. Most Islamic parties slid closer to the political periphery, and the largest one, PKS, was beset by controversy. Government and community responses to a brutal attack on the Ahmadiyah sect in early 2011 showed the limits of Indonesia's much lauded religious tolerance.
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source RePEc; PAIS Index; Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; EBSCOhost Business Source Complete
subjects Authority
Center and Periphery
Commissions
Community
Corruption
Criticism
Democracy
democratic regression
Economic policy
Economics
Elections
Electorate
Elite
Finance
Indonesia
Islam
Political analysis
political Islam
Political Parties
Political systems
Politicians
Politics
presidential incumbency
Presidents
Religion & politics
Religious behaviour
religious intolerance
Risk
Sects
Studies
Yudhoyono, Susilo Bambang
title Indonesian politics in 2011: democratic regression and Yudhoyono's regal incumbency
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