Offering an in-depth account of how the forces and institutions of oligarchy established their ascendancy in post-authoritarian Indonesia, this volume represents the new and updated edition of a highly influential study.
In the wake of neo-liberal markets and democracy being progressively replaced by a more state-centred and nationalist vision of Indonesias destiny, this new edition charts the evolution of oligarchic power following Jokowis rise to power. Chapters argue that the developments of the last decade, now shaping the presidency of Prabowo Subianto, represent the culmination of processes of power reorganisation and oligarchic consolidation set in motion during the early post-Soeharto period. The book challenges resurgent pluralist explanations about the relationship between democracy and market institutions, demonstrating how democratic politics, populist impulses, and oligarchic domination can ultimately co-exist and sustain one another.
This revised edition of one of the most highly cited and influential works on modern Indonesian politics will be suitable as a textbook on Indonesian and Southeast Asian society and economy. It will also be of interest to academics in Southeast Asian politics, as well as those interested in political economy, development and society in general.
Arvustused
"Readers with an interest in Indonesian politics will eagerly welcome this updated version of a classic study. Reorganising Power in Indonesia set the parameters of debate on the nature of politics in post-Soeharto Indonesia and it remains an indispensable volume today."
-- Edward Aspinall, Australian National University
Part I Historical And Theoretical Frameworks
Introduction
Chapter 1 Theories of Change and the Case Of Indonesia
Chapter 2 The Genesis Of Oligarchy: Soehartos New Order, 19651982
Part II The Triumph Of Oligarchy, 19821997
Chapter 3 Hijacking the Markets
Chapter 4 Capturing the Political Regime
Chapter 5 Disorganising Civil Society
Part III The Oligarchy In Crisis, 19971998
Chapter 6 Economic Catastrophe
Chapter 7 Political Unravelling
Part IV Oligarchy Reconstituted
Chapter 8 Reorganising Economic Power
Chapter 9 Reorganising Political Power
Chapter 10 Can Oligarchy Survive?
Part V Power Reorganised
Chapter 11 Power Reorganised: Towards the End of Reformasi
Chapter 12 Economic Nationalism and State Capitalism
Chapter 13 Oligarchy Beyond Reformasi: New Tensions and Contradictions
Vedi R. Hadiz (FASSA) is Professor of Asian Studies and Redmond Barry Distinguished Professor at the Asia Institute, University of Melbourne, where he was Director. He has also been Assistant Deputy Vice-Chancellor International at the University of Melbourne. At Murdoch University, he was Professor of Asian Societies and Politics and at the National University of Singapore, Associate Professor of Sociology. He has written on oligarchy and capitalism, democracy and populism and labour movements in Indonesia/Southeast Asia and the Middle East.
Richard Robison (FASSA) is Honorary Professorial Fellow at the Asia Institute, University of Melbourne, and Emeritus Professor, Murdoch University. He was formerly Professor of Political Economy at the International Institute of Social Studies in The Hague, the Netherlands, and Director of the Australian Research Councils Special Centre for the Study of Political and Economic Change in Asia at Murdoch University, Australia. He has written widely on the political economy of Indonesia and Southeast Asia.