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Foreign Policy, Islam and Democracy in Indonesia

Dewi Fortuna Anwar
- Vol. 3, Iss: 1, pp 37-54
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TLDR
The relations between Islam and democracy in Indonesia and their implications for the countrys foreign policy have attracted considerable attention in recent years as mentioned in this paper, and the international community, especially Western countries, has looked to Indonesia to provide an alternative face of Islam in the midst of rising religious extremism and terrorism.
Abstract
The relations between Islam and Democracy in Indonesia and their implications for the countrys foreign policy have attracted considerable attention in recent years. In the early years of his frst presidential term, Susilo Bambang Yudhono introduced the concept of Indonesias international identity, that is, as a country in which Islam, democracy and modernity go hand in hand. In the post-9/ international context, in which perceptions of Islam are largely negative, Indonesias special attributes as the largest Muslim-majority country and the worlds third largest democracy have special values. The international community, especially Western countries, has looked to Indonesia to provide an alternative face of Islam in the midst of rising religious extremism and terrorism. Indonesia, however, still faces many challenges in realising its aspirations to be a bridge between the Islamic world and the West, and as an alternative model within the Islamic world. Frequent acts of religious intolerance have marred Indonesias claim as a moderate Islamic force while Indonesia has generally been perceived to lie in the periphery of the Islamic world.

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Beyond Click Activism: New Media and Political Processes in Contemporary Indonesia

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors proposed a method to improve the accuracy of 6.8×6.8.0.0% and 6.5×5.8% respectively.
Dissertation

American grand strategy and US foreign policy towards Indonesia

Abstract: This study focuses on how and why American grand strategy has impacted bilateral US foreign policy towards Indonesia, and the manner in which particularly American characteristics of strategic culture have infused this dynamic relationship. The overall value placed upon Indonesia within US grand strategic considerations has varied considerably in the post-World II period, as too have particular policies that take Indonesia’s changing role into account. Structural realist approaches fail to fully explain these fluctuations of interest towards Indonesia by the United States, as they were influenced but not determined by changes within the international system. As such, strict structural realist explanations can tell only part of the story. In order to address shortcomings of the structural realist model, these variations in strategic importance and bilateral policy are considered using a neoclassical realist model in order to consider the unique practice and formulation of American grand strategy. Particular attention is paid to the national security and strategic culture in which such strategies are considered, formulated, and evaluated in order to better understand how such policies are understood and made. Such a framework allows for the consideration of the traditional strengths and weaknesses associated with realist scholarship while supplementing these perspectives with a nuanced and historically-oriented viewpoint that evaluates how particularly American characteristics within the formulation and practice of grand strategy influence the relationship of the United States with Indonesia. Historical and contemporary data are evaluated using Green’s “three-note chord” formulation of American grand strategic thought, highlighting the overlapping concerns of physical security, economic security, and the promotion of values within both overall American grand strategy and US bilateral foreign policy towards Indonesia. Through the consideration of the influence of traditional and historical characteristics of American grand strategy, namely the particular national strategic culture of the United States, a more comprehensive understanding of Indonesia’s changing role within the overall foreign policy framework of the United States can be found. In doing so, it also confirms the theoretical and practical value offered by neoclassical realism within the broader universe of international relations scholarship. Furthermore, this nuanced examination of American strategic culture allows for an insight into what role Indonesia might play in the future of American grand strategy while also pointing to potential sources of future scholarship.
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References
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Book

Islam and the state in Indonesia

TL;DR: The relationship between Islam and the state and politics in contemporary Indonesia is discussed in this paper, where Islam is used as the symbol and ideological basis for 181 new political parties in the country.
Book

Indonesia and the Muslim World: Between Islam and Secularism in the Foreign Policy of Soeharto and Beyond

TL;DR: The authors argued that popular hostility and official ambivalence in Indonesia to the United States-led ‘War on Terror' seem easily understandable in in in the world's largest Muslim country.