The authoritarian regime and its leader are gone and the structures that maintained his power are weakened, but in post-New Order Indonesia violent conflict has become more frequent and more varied. It is no longer sufficient to explain the violence in the terms used by the regime and others during its rule.
The term 'British interregnum', in relation to Indonesia, refers to two short periods in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries when the British took control of most of the Netherlands Indies from the Dutch, only to hand it back a few years later. The British did this as a result of their wars with France. The first occupation occurred in 1795-1797 after a pro-France regime had been…
Journal of The Royal Institute of Linguistics and Anthropology
Journal of The Royal Institute of Linguistics and Anthropology
Journal of The Royal Institute of Linguistics and Anthropology
The Balinese System of Person Definition
A Jamaican maroon historical myth
Journal of The Royal Institute of Linguistics and Anthropology
Journal of The Royal Institute of Linguistics and Anthropology