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Religiosity, parties and election: Islamization and democratization in post-Soeharto Indonesia
Author(s) -
Pramono U. Tanthowi
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
indonesian journal of islam and muslim societies/indonesian journal of islam and muslim sociaties
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.195
H-Index - 5
eISSN - 2406-825X
pISSN - 2089-1490
DOI - 10.18326/ijims.v2i1.1-27
Subject(s) - islamization , democratization , politics , democracy , political science , islam , indonesian , appeal , political economy , sociology , religious studies , law , theology , philosophy , linguistics
The political development in Indonesian during the first decade of reform era witnesses a resurgence of Muslim politics, which had been facing a political impass during the 1970s and 1980s. In contrast to current political development in the Arab World, the resurgence of Muslim politics in Indonesia has been marching hand in hand with democratization. The blossoming of tens of Islamic political parties by no means that they speak with a single voice. Rather, political Islam is now represented by parties with more diverse platforms. Those parties are not only varied in their commitment to an Islamist agenda but also strongly divided on this agenda. Yet, they all welcome and uphold “Muslim” aspirations. As far as their performance in the 1999 and the 2004 elections is concerned, there was a significant decline for Muslim politics compared to the first democratic election of 1955. The results reflected the minority appeal of Islamism, regardless of both the fact that the majority of the Indonesians are Muslims and the fact that there has been increasing Islamic revivalism within Indonesian society.

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