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Democracy and Islam in Indonesia
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27 August 2013

Mirjam Künkler is assistant professor in the Department of Near Eastern Studies at Princeton University.
Alfred Stepan is the Wallace Sayre Professor of Government at Columbia University.
Acknowledgments
List of Abbreviations
Chronology
Part I. Introduction
1. Indonesian Democratization in Theoretical Perspective by Mirjam Künkler and Alfred Stepan
2. Indonesian Democracy: From Transition to Consolidation by R. William Liddle and Saiful Mujani
Part II. Attitudes: The Development of a Democratic Consensus by Religious and Political Actors
3. How Pluralist Democracy Became the Consensual Discourse Among Secular and Nonsecular Muslims in Indonesia by Mirjam Künkler
4. Christian and Muslim Minorities in Indonesia: State Policies and Majority Islamic Organizations by Franz Magnis-Suseno
Part III. Behaviors: Challenges to the Democratic Transition and State and Their Transcendence
5. Veto Player No More? The Declining Political Influence of the Military in Postauthoritarian Indonesia by Marcus Mietzner
6. Indonesian Government Approaches to Radical Islam Since 1998 by Sidney Jones
7. How Indonesia Survived: Comparative Perspectives on State Disintegration and Democratic Integration by Edward Aspinall
Part IV. Constitutionalism: The Role of Law and Legal Pluralism
8. Contours of Sharia in Indonesia by John Bowen
9. Unfinished Business: Law Reform by Tim Lindsey and Simon Butt
Glossary
Notes
Selected Bibliography
Contributors
Index