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" State, class and regime in Indonesia : "
Halldorsson, Jon Ormur
Document Type
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Latin Dissertation
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Record Number
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1093845
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Doc. No
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TLets303401
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Main Entry
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Halldorsson, Jon Ormur
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Title & Author
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State, class and regime in Indonesia :\ Halldorsson, Jon Ormur
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College
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University of Kent at Canterbury
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Date
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1991
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student score
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1991
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Degree
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Ph.D.
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Abstract
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The concern behind the thesis is with the potential for democratisation of Indonesian politics. It is shown that the undemocratic form government has taken in Indonesia has not been determined by a cultural predisposition but is the logical outcome of politics of access to economic resources. Political history of Indonesia is interpreted through theorisation structured around three concepts, state, regime and class. The state is understood as the site of economic conflict as well as an integrating principle. Its role in structuring the interests it represents is given attention. A difficult problem in Identification and understanding of the interests promoted by the state is overcome through theoretical separation of regime from state. It is shown that the state is not an entity with a life of its own, nor has it been an instruments of any class. Moreover, the state has not been under military control in recent years, nor furthered military interests in politics or business. This, as well as the continued centrality of the state, is explained through analysis of imperatives generated by economic forces and the evolving class configuration at the top of society. The business interests of a ruling group are mapped out in some detail, and so is the interlinking between these and the Chinese owned conglomerates dominating the economy, It is shown that these interests, advanced by monopoly access to the state, have now transformed the state to a much greater degree than did the assumed watershed events of past decades. The political and economic imperatives generated by the interests represented by the Suharto and Chinese owned conglomerates, and companies under their umbrellas, provide a framework of constraints and opportunities with regard to democratisation. This is understood through focus on the politics of gradual elite inclusion in an exclusionary system constituted by dominant economic interests, now increasingly privatised, but still dependent on privileged access to the state.
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Subject
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G Geography (General)
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HM Sociology
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JA Political science (General)
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Added Entry
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University of Kent at Canterbury
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