Political Parties in Post-Suharto Indonesia: Between Politik Aliran and ‘Philippinisation’

By kolumnis at 10 April, 2008, 2:15 pm

ANDREAS UFEN, German Institute of Global and Area Studies (GIGA)

Surprisingly, the outcome of the 1999 and 2004 elections in Indonesia and the resultant constellation of political parties are reminiscent of the first Indonesian parliamentary democracy of the 1950s. The dynamics of party politics is still marked by aliran (’streams’), i.e. some of the biggest political parties still have a mass base and are embedded in specific milieus. But politik aliran has lost a lot of its significance and re-emerged in a quite different form after the fall of Suharto in 1998. Starting with this observation, it is argued that parties are still socially rooted, so a modified aliran approach still has its analytical value. However, one can also witness a weakening of aliran (dealiranisasi) and a concomitant ‘Philippinisation’, which is indicated by the rise of presidential or presidentialised parties, growing intra-party authoritarianism, the prevalence of ‘money politics’, the lack of meaningful political platforms, weak loyalties towards parties, cartels with shifting coalitions and the upsurge of new local elites.

Download at http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=977982

Categories : Publikasi
kolumnis

kolumnis , Situs ini akan dikembangkan menjadi sebuah sindikasi para penulis opini/kolom. Saat ini Kolumnis.com masih dalam tahap pengembangan (beta version) dari segi tampilan maupun isi.
Semua Tulisan kolumnis
Blog:



No comments yet.

Leave a comment

Note: This post is over 7 months old. You may want to check later in this blog to see if there is new information relevant to your comment.