The Constitution of Indonesia: A Contextual Analysis

Paperback / softback

Main Details

Title The Constitution of Indonesia: A Contextual Analysis
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Simon Butt
By (author) prof Tim Lindsey
SeriesConstitutional Systems of the World
Physical Properties
Format:Paperback / softback
Pages:340
Dimensions(mm): Height 216,Width 138
ISBN/Barcode 9781849460187
ClassificationsDewey:342.598
Audience
Professional & Vocational

Publishing Details

Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Imprint Hart Publishing
Publication Date 29 August 2012
Publication Country United Kingdom

Description

For decades, Indonesia's 1945 Constitution, the second shortest in the modern world, was used as an apologia by successive authoritarian regimes. A bare-bones text originally intended as a temporary measure, it did little beyond establish basic state organs, including a powerful presidency. It did not offer citizens real guarantees or protections. These weaknesses were ruthlessly exploited by the military-backed regime that President Soeharto headed from 1966 until his fall in 1998. The (first ever) amendments to the Constitution, which began the following year and were completed in 2002, changed all this. Enlarging and rethinking the Constitution, they ushered in a liberal democratic system based around human rights, an open society and separation of powers. These reforms also created a Constitutional Court that has provided Indonesia's first judicial forum for serious debate on the interpretation and application of the Constitution, as well as its first significant and easily-accessible body of detailed and reasoned judgments. Today, Indonesian constitutional law is rich, sophisticated and complex. This book surveys this remarkable constitutional transition, assessing the implementation of Indonesia's new constitutional model and identifying its weaknesses. After covering key institutions exercising executive, legislative and judicial powers, the book focuses on current constitutional debates, ranging from human rights to decentralisation, religious freedom and control of the economy.

Author Biography

Simon Butt is Senior Lecturer at Sydney Law School. Tim Lindsey is Malcolm Smith Professor of Asian Law and Director of the Asian Law Centre and the Centre for Islamic Law and Society at the University of Melbourne.

Reviews

...the book will likely become a must-read for students and researchers of Indonesia. [It is] a good introduction to comparative and area studies, as it gives an excellent overview of the institutional framework of the country and its socio-political debates. Butt and Lindsey prove than an analysis that takes the Constitution as its lens can produce a balanced and well-rooted picture not only of the legal-institutional structure of a given country, but also of its social and historical backdrop. -- Karolina Prasad * Journal of Current Southeast Asian Affairs, Volume 31(4) *