Incorporating new data from Indonesia and an array of methods, this book demonstrates that excluded ethnic groups mobilize violence during political transition in multi-ethnic settings to demand representation in local politics. Once these demands are met, violence dissipates. For students and scholars of comparative politics and ethnic conflict.
Incorporating new data from Indonesia and an array of methods, this book demonstrates that excluded ethnic groups mobilize violence during political transition in multi-ethnic settings to demand representation in local politics. Once these demands are met, violence dissipates. For students and scholars of comparative politics and ethnic conflict.
Risa Toha is Assistant Professor of Political Science at Yale-NUS College in Singapore. Her work has focused on questions related to political violence, identity, and political economy, appearing in journals such as the British Journal of Political Science, Terrorism and Political Violence, and Journal of Contemporary Southeast Asia.
Inhaltsangabe
1. Introduction 2. Exclusion and violence during democratic transitions 3. The emergence of identity-based cleavages in Indonesia 4. Ethnic politics in Soeharto's new order regime 5. Golkar's dominance and ethnic riots 6. Micro dynamics of exclusion and riots 7. How riots dissipated 8. Conclusion Glossary References: Index.
1. Introduction 2. Exclusion and violence during democratic transitions 3. The emergence of identity-based cleavages in Indonesia 4. Ethnic politics in Soeharto's new order regime 5. Golkar's dominance and ethnic riots 6. Micro dynamics of exclusion and riots 7. How riots dissipated 8. Conclusion Glossary References: Index.
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