Co-opting Good Governance Reform: The Rise of a Not-so-Reformist Leader in Kebumen,Central Java |
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Authors: | Ina Choi |
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Affiliation: | 1. inachoi01@googlemail.com |
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Abstract: | Challenging the existing literature, which tends to downplay the impact of good governance reform in post-Suharto Indonesia, the article suggests that greater intervention by international donors, combined with the process of decentralisation, has influenced the dynamics of political competition at the local level. It suggests that the increasing availability of international aid has provided local elites with an option to engage in a new form of patronage politics that relies less on old instruments, such as money politics and violence. By selectively committing themselves to good governance reform, Indonesian local elites can now seek a new source of power in the form of support from international donors, with which they can raise their profiles as ‘reformists’ and consolidate power, only to engage in familiar, if less blatant, forms of patronage politics. The article highlights such a dimension of local politics with reference to the case of Kebumen's former regent, Rustriningsih. |
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Keywords: | Indonesia Local Politics Decentralisation Good Governance International Aid |
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