Postcolonial Citizenship in Provincial Indonesia

Gerry van Klinken

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Springer Singapore img Link Publisher

Sozialwissenschaften, Recht, Wirtschaft / Vergleichende und internationale Politikwissenschaft

Beschreibung

This book examines the history of state formation in postcolonial Indonesia by starting with the death of Jan Djong, an activist and a former village head in the little town of Maumere. It historicizes contemporary debates on citizenship in the postcolonial world.

Citizenship has been called the “organizing principle of state-society relations in modern states”. Democratization is today most intense in the non-Western, post-colonial world. Yet “real” citizenship seems largely absent there. Only a few rights-claiming, autonomous, and individualistic citizens celebrated in mainstream literature exist in post-colonial countries.

In reflecting on one concrete story to examine the core dilemmas facing the study of citizenship in postcolonial settings, this book challenges ethnocentricity found within current scholarly work on citizenship in Europe and North America and addresses issues of institutional fragility, political violence, as well as legitimacy and aspirations to freedom in non-Western cultures.


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Schlagwörter

Maumere and Anti-Communist Movement, Decolonisation in Indonesia, Colonialism in Indonesia, Republican activism in Maumere, Indonesia, Communists in Sikka, Factionalism and patronage in Indonesia, Jan Djong, Postcolonial Citizenship in Asia, Communists in postcolonial Indonesia, Citizenship in postcolonial Indonesia, Decentralised despotism in Indonesia, citizenship, Postcolonial Citizenship in Indonesia, State formation in postcolonial, Military Politics in Indonesia