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5 - Golkar’s Dominance and Ethnic Riots

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 October 2021

Risa J. Toha
Affiliation:
Yale-NUS College, Singapore
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Summary

This chapter discusses the specific relationships between Golkar’s entrenchment, the exclusion of local ethnic elites, and the mobilization of riots in two high-conflict Indonesian provinces, Central Sulawesi and Maluku. By comparing two pairs of districts – Ambon and Maluku Tenggara in Maluku province, and Banggai and Poso in Central Sulawesi province – I demonstrate the importance of local elites’ framing, mobilization, and organization of violence. Although the four districts are relatively similar in their religious and ethnic composition, level of economic development, and dependence on the state, Ambon and Poso experienced some of the most protracted and intense ethnocommunal violence in Indonesia’s recent history, while their two neighboring districts, Maluku Tenggara and Banggai, respectively, were relatively peaceful by comparison. Relying on interviews with bureaucrats, community leaders, and former combatants, I show that these diverging outcomes can be attributed to local elites’ initial political configuration at the onset of the democratic transition, and to their actions and responses to trigger events.

Type
Chapter
Information
Rioting for Representation
Local Ethnic Mobilization in Democratizing Countries
, pp. 119 - 141
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2021

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