Women’s Political Representation in Indonesia: Who Wins and How?
Date
2021
Authors
Aspinall, Edward
White, Sally
Savirani, Amalinda
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Publisher
German Institute of Global and Area Studies (GIGA)
Abstract
This article analyses barriers to women’s political representation in Indonesia and the ways that women candidates overcome them. Surveying the literature and drawing on three data sources – findings of thirteen teams of researchers studying women candidates running in the 2019 election, a survey of 127 such candidates, and a nationally representative survey of Indonesian citizens – the article identifies widespread patriarchal attitudes as one significant barrier, alongside structural disadvantages. It highlights two distinctive methods by which women candidates aim to overcome these barriers: one group of candidates target women voters and draw on women’s networks to mobilise what has been called “homosocial capital”; another group of dynastic candidates rely on the political and financial resources of (often male) relatives. The article briefly surveys the place of political Islam in both impeding and facilitating women’s representation. By surveying these issues, the article introduces this special issue on women’s political representation and the 2019 election.
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Keywords
Indonesia, women’s political representation, gender quotas, homosocial capital, supply and demand model, women and Islam, patriarchy, clientelism
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Source
Journal of Current Southeast Asian Affairs
Type
Journal article
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Access Statement
Open Access
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Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License
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