Publication | Closed Access
Old State, New Society: Indonesia's New Order in Comparative Historical Perspective
242
Citations
12
References
1983
Year
New SocietyRegime AnalysisNationalismColonialismEast Asian StudiesEconomic DevelopmentInternational Comparative PerspectiveDecolonialityEducationComparative Historical PerspectiveSocial SciencesGeopoliticsDutch Colonial StateOld StateInternational RelationsAnti-colonial TheoryComparative PoliticsPostcolonial StudiesHistorical TransitionColonial PredecessorsPolitical TransformationAnthropologySocial AnthropologyPolitical ScienceAnti-imperialism
The author of this article argues that the paradox of postcolonial states pursuing internal and external policies remarkably similar to those of their colonial predecessors, despite the passage from colonialism to independence, is best resolved by focusing on the distinct, long-standing, institutional interests of the state-qua-state. It is these interests that make explicable the key policies of Suharto's New Order toward economic development, the Chinese minority, participatory organizations, and internal and external security. The author analyzes the nature and growth of the Dutch colonial state, its decline and near-collapse between 1942 (Japanese invasion) and 1965 (downfall of Sukarno's Guided Democracy), and its revival under ex-colonial sergeant Suharto.
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