Academic literature on the topic 'Indonesians'

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Journal articles on the topic "Indonesians"

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Ignesius, Nikita Christy. "Chinese Indonesians’ Thoughts About Indonesia’s Government Handling the 1998 Tragedy." K@ta Kita 10, no. 1 (March 15, 2022): 149–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.9744/katakita.10.1.149-153.

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Two decades passed by but the 1998 riot case is still remembered as a traumatic event for Chinese Indonesian people. Started from the economy crisis in July 1997 where Rupiah currency dropped and gave a huge damage to the Indonesia economy and politic section. This crisis made the poor non Chinese Indonesian envied the Chinese Indonesians. The riot reached its peak in May 1998 where Chinese Indonesians got harassed. Many Chinese Indonesians decided to leave Indonesia to live in other countries temporary or forever. Each generation keep reminding this incident made the young Chinese Indonesian generation aware of the Non Chinese Indonesian. This research aims to reveal the thoughts of Chinese Indonesian about the Indonesian government in handling the 1998 riot and examine the reason behind the Chinese Indonesian thoughts. The researcher also hoped that this research can be used as reference in other research related to this 1998 riot.Keywords : 1998 riot, Chinese Indonesians, Indonesia’s Government
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Christian, Yoel. "The Construction of Chinese Indonesians in Ngenest Film." K@ta Kita 7, no. 3 (December 16, 2019): 302–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.9744/katakita.7.3.302-310.

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The thesis focuses on how Chinese Indonesians are constructed in Ngenest and why they are constructed that way. Chinese Indonesians become a scapegoat and considered bad ethnic group since they are the minority. By using the Ethnic Construction and Stereotype theory it helps me to reveal the constructions of Chinese Indonesians in Ngenest, and also why they are constructed that way. I would analyze the Chinese Indonesian major and minor characters in Ngenest. This can be revealed from the way they interact with the society in Ngenest. In conclusion, Chinese Indonesians are not accepted as one’s own in their land because of their construction as perpetual foreigners, being loyal to Chinese traditions which makes them different from the rest of the Indonesian society, and being rich by exploiting non-Chinese Indonesians. Since the Chinese Indonesians are the minority, they become a scapegoat and target of non-Chinese Indonesians in the society. Keywords: racism, ethnic construction, stereotyping, representation, Chinese Indonesians
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Gunawan, Elizabeth Susanti. "The Growing Interest of Indonesian Students Studying in China Post Suharto Era." Journal of Chinese Overseas 14, no. 1 (April 23, 2018): 115–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/17932548-12341369.

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Abstract In the Suharto era (1966-1998), there were eight discriminatory regulations toward regarding Chinese Indonesians that effectively banned the use of Chinese language and culture in public. For three decades, these regulations forced Chinese Indonesians to forget about Chinese language and culture and embedded anti-Chinese sentiment into non-Chinese Indonesians. After the end of the Suharto era, some regulations annulled the previous regulations, thus allowing Chinese culture including Chinese language to be practiced in public again. It created an unexpected Chinese boom. An increasing number of Indonesian students went to China to study the Chinese language. Today, many Indonesian students (Chinese Indonesians and non-Chinese Indonesians) not only study Chinese but have started to enroll in various faculties for degree programs in Chinese universities. This article uses statistical data and interviews in an attempt to explain Indonesian students’ reasons for studying in China and their degree preferences.
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Sutandio, Anton, and Sonny Angjaya. "THE CONCEPT OF CHINESE-INDONESIAN-NESS AS SEEN FROM ERNEST PRAKASA’S ROLES IN NGENEST, CEK TOKO SEBELAH, SUSAH SINYAL AND STIP & PENSIL." Capture : Jurnal Seni Media Rekam 11, no. 1 (November 26, 2019): 81–103. http://dx.doi.org/10.33153/capture.v11i1.2665.

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This article discusses four films entitled Ngenest (2015), Cek Toko Sebelah (2016), Susah Sinyal (2017), and Stip & Pensil (2017) in which Ernest Prakasa played a role, in the context of how the four films construct Chinese-Indonesian-ness. In the context of cinema, the appearance of Chinese-Indonesians on the screen during the New Order regime was scarce, and if there is any, the depiction was highly stereotyped. Only after Reform era in the late 1990s that Chinese-Indonesians and their culture began to re-appear on screen. Ernest Prakasa is one of few Chinese-Indonesians who publicly celebrates his Chinese-ness through entertainment platform. Ethnic identity theory applied on the discussion of the film cinematography and mise-en-scene to show what the films say about the concept of Chinese-Indonesian-ness. The findings show that Prakasa not only celebrates being a Chinese-Indonesian, but he also performs a self-mockery as Chinese-Indonesians by explicitly emphasizing the Chinese-Indonesians stereotypes. He also tries to re-establish inter-ethnic relationship and introduce contemporary Chinese-Indonesian-ness concept through his films.
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Lücking, Mirjam. "Travelling with the Idea of Taking Sides." Bijdragen tot de taal-, land- en volkenkunde / Journal of the Humanities and Social Sciences of Southeast Asia 175, no. 2-3 (July 12, 2019): 196–224. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/22134379-17502020.

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Abstract Israel and Indonesia share no diplomatic relations, and considering Indonesia’s cordial bonds with the Palestinian Authority, Indonesian society is deemed to be critical of Israel. However, the ways in which Indonesians relate to ‘Others’ in Israel and Palestine are not monolithic. Indonesian perspectives on the Middle East are far more nuanced, as might be assumed from the largest Muslim society in the world, and the idea of ‘taking sides’ is challenged by encounters on the ground and by inter- and intra-religious rivalries. Contemporary pilgrimage tourism from Indonesia to Israel and the Palestinian Territories shows how Christian and Muslim Indonesians engage in conflictive identity politics through contrasting images of Israeli and Palestinian Others. Indonesian pilgrims’ viewpoints on these Others and on the Israel–Palestine conflict mirror the politicization and marketization of religious affiliation. This reveals peculiarities of the local engagement with global politics and the impact of travelling, which can inspire both the manifestation of enemy images and the blurring of identity markers.
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Katemba, Caroline Victorine. "SMALL TALK AMONG THE INDONESIANS IN THREE DIFFERENT COUNTRIES: AMERICA, INDONESIA, PHILIPPINES." Acuity : Journal of English Language Pedagogy, Literature and Culture 1, no. 2 (January 1, 2016): 66–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.35974/acuity.v1i2.606.

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This study explores the “Small Talk” Among the Indonesians in three countries. It aims to determine the topics that make up a small talk among the Indonesians in the motherland/homeland, USA (New Jersey, LA, Washington D.C), and the Philippines (Manila).This study sought to answer the following questions: (a) What particular topics of conversation shared by the Indonesians upon meeting for the first time? (b). Are Indonesians who stay in the motherland/homeland and those who are in the Philippines and those who migrated to the USA shared the same topics? (c).What changes of conversational topic has taken place? Key Words: small talk, Indonesian culture, the Indonesians
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Lie (李惠贞), Sunny, and Todd Sandel (申大德). "Unwelcomed Guests." Journal of Chinese Overseas 16, no. 1 (May 12, 2020): 31–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/17932548-12341412.

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Abstract This study explicates discourse on Indonesian social media pertaining to Chinese Indonesians by analyzing comments posted on Facebook. Using Cultural Discourse Analysis (CuDA), we show how Chinese are depicted as the “other” in Indonesian discourse. We also unpack persuasive efforts to convince readers of Chinese Indonesians’ other-ness through such rhetorical terms as cina (racial slur against Chinese Indonesians) and pribumi (native, indigenous, non-Chinese). The functional accomplishment of such discourse works to (1) exert the power to determine indigeneity and inclusivity; and (2) solidify Chinese Indonesians’ position as non-native, and a scapegoat for problems in Indonesia. Findings from this study further our understanding of ways to analyze and unpack discursive construction in online communication. They also demonstrate how social media may amplify and/or construct social and political discourses.
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Exelsior, Arya Sandy Damara, and Jenny Mochtar. "Western Influence in Contemporary Chinese Indonesian Weddings." k@ta kita 11, no. 1 (March 9, 2023): 90–97. http://dx.doi.org/10.9744/katakita.11.1.90-97.

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In every culture, there is one important tradition: marriage. Marriage is important for Chinese Indonesians as it is considered to be a rite of passage. Due to globalization, many young Chinese Indonesians have little knowledge about Chinese traditions and tend to adopt Western wedding traditions as something more modern. Hence, Chinese Indonesian find new ways to convey their cultural identity as both Chinese and modern by using Chinese and Western wedding traditions. This article aims to identify the elements of Western culture that are commonly used in Chinese Indonesian weddings and the reasons they choose to use those elements. Western cultural elements commonly used in Chinese-Indonesian weddings can be seen in the wedding rituals, attire, and decorations. This article suggests that Chinese Indonesians who uses Western and Chinese wedding traditions create a new cultural identity as modern Chinese Indonesian. A hybrid culture emerges to form a contemporary or modern Chinese Indonesian wedding.
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Sukma, Bayu Permana. "CONSTRUCTING AND PROMOTING NATIONAL IDENTITY THROUGH TOURISM: A MULTIMODAL DISCOURSE ANALYSIS OF INDONESIAN OFFICIAL TOURISM WEBSITE." Linguistik Indonesia 39, no. 1 (March 3, 2021): 63–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.26499/li.v39i1.197.

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This paper aims to examine the contribution of multimodal resources in the Indonesian official tourism website in constructing and promoting the Indonesian national identity. Data were gathered from 7 verbal (linguistic) texts and 13 visual (nonlinguistic) texts presented in the Indonesian official tourism website. This study draws on Wodak et al’s (2009) discursive strategies of national identity construction and Kress and van Leuween’s (2006) theory of visual design. The results of the study show that the combination of verbal and visual texts in the Indonesian official tourism website contribute to the Indonesian national identity construction and promotion. The constructed and promoted Indonesian national identities are 1) Indonesia as a country with the rich natural landscape; 2) Indonesia as an archipelagic tropical country; 3) Indonesia as a maritime country; 4) Indonesia as a technologically advanced country; 5) Indonesia as a modern country; 6) Indonesia as a multicultural country; 7) Indonesia as a country with cultural richness; 8) Indonesians as people who are open to strangers or foreigners; 9) Indonesians as kind and friendly people; and 10) Indonesians as modern people.
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Wulansari, Wulansari. "Direct and Indirect Compliment Responses: A Descriptive Qualitative Study among Indonesians and Americans." Celt: A Journal of Culture, English Language Teaching & Literature 20, no. 1 (February 19, 2021): 96. http://dx.doi.org/10.24167/celt.v20i1.2655.

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Abstract: Indonesians and Americans have the strategies to respond the compliment which came from different culture. The aims of this research were addressing types of strategies and disclosing the direct and indirect response used by the Indonesians and Americans to respond the compliments. The research data consist of English and Indonesian. The data was analyzed by using qualitative method. The Discourse Completion Test (DCT) questionnaire was used to know the differences between compliment response given to Indonesians and Americans. The result of the research showed that the (1) responded category of Holmes (1986) classification of compliment responses strategies (CRs) are using three strategies (accept, reject and evade) among Indonesians and Americans. Indonesians tended to accept, reject and evade compliment by giving some reasons. While Americans tended using three categories by saying, "thank you" due to express of openness and receiving appreciation from the interlocutor. (2) The existence of culture plays an important role in responding compliment towards Indonesians and Americans. The Americans respond to compliments direct response and simple answers to compliments. Meanwhile, Indonesians prefer to respond compliment with indirect responses because they were leaning on the principle known as saving face politeness.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Indonesians"

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Adi, Rianto. "The impact of international labour migration in Indonesia /." Title page, contents and abstract only, 1996. http://web4.library.adelaide.edu.au/theses/09PH/09pha2345.pdf.

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Beatty, Andrew W. "Exchange and social organization in Nias, Indonesia." Thesis, University of Oxford, 1989. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.303453.

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Goh, Kai Kok Sunny. "Chinese Indonesians pursuing Higher Education in Singapore : A Grounded Theory Approach." Thesis, University of Leicester, 2011. http://hdl.handle.net/2381/9281.

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This study generates a substantive theory of how Chinese Indonesian undergraduates adapt themselves in a Singapore private university. This thesis adopts an interpretivistic perspective and engages grounded theory research methodology. The principal source of information is a series of in-depth individual and focus group interviews with a group of 20 participants, supplemented by their diary accounts of their study activities over a week-long period. The first major outcome of this study is the generation of the theory of Selective Accommodation that describes how these international students apply various social-psychological strategies based on their perceptions of their sojourn in a foreign country and on their future intentions. Their accommodation distinctiveness, on the one hand, is a response to the perceived political persecution they face as minorities in their home country and to their acquired Indonesian culture. On the other hand, their accommodation strategies are also facilitated by Singapore’s vision of becoming a global educational hub. The result was the derivation of five accommodation categories of push factors, pull factors, pliability, study mechanisms and future direction. The second major outcome that arises from the grounded theory approach is the development of a typology of Chinese Indonesians based on how they react to the five categories during their three-year tertiary courses. This typology consists of four Ideal Types of accommodation, namely ambassadors, adherents, achievers and apathetics. In short, this study provides a fresh perspective on how foreign students adapt to life on foreign soil in their own unique ways. At the same time, it has implications for the development of theory, practice and educational research in cross border student migration.
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Singleton, Helen Caroline Mackay. "Frameworks for the management of cross-cultural communication and business performance in the globalizing economy: a professional service TNC case study in Indonesia." Thesis, Curtin University, 2002. http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/1305.

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Globalization increases the integration and interdependence of international, national and local business and stakeholder communities across economic, political and cultural spheres. Communication technology and the international role for English suggest the integrating global communication reality is simplifying. Experience indicates integration produces complex heterogeneous dialogue and asymmetrical relationships with no shared interpretative systems. The global/national/local nexus presents management with universal and particular paradoxes mediated through diverse contextual micro communication practices and behaviours. This thesis derives from a professional service (environmental engineering) TNC request for help to address the business communication and performance concerns implicated in the production of professional bi-lingual English and Indonesian reports for clients. At the heart of this corporate concern lie the multicultural nature of interactions between the individuals, organizations and wider stakeholders involved in the Jakarta, Indonesian branch office operations. A developing nation adds further complexity. This thesis contends that these micro organizational concerns link to critical macro economic, political, and cultural societal concerns for the development of more responsive ethical and sustainable management and governance. This thesis argues for an elevated notion of the role of communication management to enable business to pursue more sustainable goals, improve business performance, and address the issue of risk. The thesis reviews multidisciplinary literature to develop a multifaceted theoretical framework that links macro management issues to this micro contextual concern.This framework guides a qualitative research strategy to apply an ethnographic-oriented case study-based methodology to map the diverse worldviews of a sample of the Indonesian professional staff, their local senior expatriate management, and Headquarters. The case study assesses the impact of diverse worldviews on the interactions, relationships and performances involved in a specific project involving the international investment sector, a national proponent developer, the national regulatory agency, local and indigenous stakeholder communities and the consulting TNC. The findings have implications for the management of international business, the higher education sector and civil society organizations.
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Murti, Desideria Cempaka Wijaya. "Locating Nation: Interactions between Indonesians and Australians in Two Cultural Heritage Villages." Thesis, Curtin University, 2020. http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/80146.

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This dissertation investigates ways of locating nation by exploring the expectations and experiences of Indonesians and Australian tourists at two cultural heritage villages in Indonesia. Drawing on concepts of imagined community, nation branding, and consumption of space, the project maps patterns of similarities, differences, and how these places are interconnected. Using a mixed methods approach of media analysis, ethnography, and discourse analysis, the thesis describes the complexity of the places, spaces, and nation.
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Sendjaja, Sasa Djuarsa. "Social reality and television news in Indonesia: An investigation of young Indonesians' perception of the television portrayals of three development program issues /." The Ohio State University, 1988. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1487597424137434.

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Singleton, Helen Caroline Mackay. "Frameworks for the management of cross-cultural communication and business performance in the globalizing economy: a professional service TNC case study in Indonesia." Curtin University of Technology, School of Language and Intercultural Education, 2002. http://espace.library.curtin.edu.au:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=16198.

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Globalization increases the integration and interdependence of international, national and local business and stakeholder communities across economic, political and cultural spheres. Communication technology and the international role for English suggest the integrating global communication reality is simplifying. Experience indicates integration produces complex heterogeneous dialogue and asymmetrical relationships with no shared interpretative systems. The global/national/local nexus presents management with universal and particular paradoxes mediated through diverse contextual micro communication practices and behaviours. This thesis derives from a professional service (environmental engineering) TNC request for help to address the business communication and performance concerns implicated in the production of professional bi-lingual English and Indonesian reports for clients. At the heart of this corporate concern lie the multicultural nature of interactions between the individuals, organizations and wider stakeholders involved in the Jakarta, Indonesian branch office operations. A developing nation adds further complexity. This thesis contends that these micro organizational concerns link to critical macro economic, political, and cultural societal concerns for the development of more responsive ethical and sustainable management and governance. This thesis argues for an elevated notion of the role of communication management to enable business to pursue more sustainable goals, improve business performance, and address the issue of risk. The thesis reviews multidisciplinary literature to develop a multifaceted theoretical framework that links macro management issues to this micro contextual concern.
This framework guides a qualitative research strategy to apply an ethnographic-oriented case study-based methodology to map the diverse worldviews of a sample of the Indonesian professional staff, their local senior expatriate management, and Headquarters. The case study assesses the impact of diverse worldviews on the interactions, relationships and performances involved in a specific project involving the international investment sector, a national proponent developer, the national regulatory agency, local and indigenous stakeholder communities and the consulting TNC. The findings have implications for the management of international business, the higher education sector and civil society organizations.
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Eifert, Yvonne [Verfasser]. "Conflict formation and transformation in Indonesia: Chinese and indigenous Indonesians on their way to peace? : A peace and conflict analysis according to the Transcend method / Yvonne Eifert." Gießen : Universitätsbibliothek, 2013. http://d-nb.info/1065183232/34.

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Matsuda, Misa. "Japanese tourists and Indonesia : images of Self and Other in the age of kokusaika (internationalization)." Thesis, Canberra, ACT : The Australian National University, 1989. http://hdl.handle.net/1885/114557.

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The case study in the following chapters has been inspired by both anthropology and Asian studies as interdisciplinary area studies. It is a study of the way in which the Other (the local people's lives and culture or the ’hosts') is represented in relation to the meaning system of the Self (tourists1 or ’guests’) in the limited context of tourism. This is studied through the representation of'Indonesia' in Japanese travel brochures, paying particular attention to the the relationship between the self-image of Japanese and the way in which they construct the Other.
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Setianto, Yearry P. "Media Use and Mediatization of Transnational Political Participation: The Case of Transnational Indonesians in the United States." Ohio University / OhioLINK, 2016. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=ohiou1461247603.

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Books on the topic "Indonesians"

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Djalal, Dino Patti. Life stories: Resep sukses dan etos hidup diaspora Indonesia di negeri orang. [Jakarta]: Red & White Pub., 2012.

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Pusat Data dan Informasi Ketenagakerjaan (Indonesia). Analisis penempatan tenaga kerja Indonesia. Jakarta: Pusat Data dan Informasi Ketenagakerjaan, Badan Penelitian, Pengembangan, dan Informasi, Departemen Tenaga Kerja dan Transmigrasi R.I., 2008.

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Dick-Read, Robert. The phantom voyagers: Evidence of Indonesian settlement in Africa in ancient times. Winchester: Thurlton, 2005.

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Adams, Kathleen Marie. Carving a new identity: Ethnic and artistic change in Tana Toraja, Indonesia. Ann Arbor: U.M.I., 1988.

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Nasution, M. Arif. Orang Indonesia di Malaysia: Menjual kemiskinan, membangun identitas. Yogyakarta: Pustaka Pelajar, 2001.

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author, Sarjiati Upik, Anwar Ratih Pratiwi author, and Pusat Penelitian Sumberdaya Regional (Indonesia), eds. The development of foreign workers policies and socio-cultural dynamics of Indonesian migrant workers in South Korea. Jakarta: Research Centre for Regional Resources, Indonesian Institute of Sciences, 2010.

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Chong, Wu-Ling. Chinese Indonesians in post-Suharto Indonesia: Democratisation and ethnic minorities. Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press, 2018.

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Juliette, Koning, and Post Peter 1953-, eds. Chinese Indonesians and regime change. Leiden: Brill, 2010.

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Dieleman, Marleen. Chinese Indonesians and regime change. Leiden: Brill, 2010.

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1962-, Lindsey Timothy, Pausacker Helen, and Coppel Charles A. 1937-, eds. Chinese Indonesians: Remembering, distorting, forgetting. Singapore: Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, 2005.

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Book chapters on the topic "Indonesians"

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Budianto, Firman, and Yusy Widarahesty. "Asylum Seeking as Survival Strategy: The Narratives of Indonesian Work Seekers in Japan." In Palgrave Macmillan Studies on Human Rights in Asia, 365–88. Singapore: Springer Nature Singapore, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-97-2867-1_14.

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AbstractThis study examines the narratives of Indonesian work seekers who have sought asylum status in Japan and explores their motives and the routes that they have taken. The qualitative data includes ethnographic fieldnotes and in-depth interviews, both in person and online, with Indonesian nationals who once aspired towards asylum-seeking status, and with Indonesians in Japan from diverse backgrounds, such as Indonesian workers and members of the diaspora in Japan, and people from related NGOs. Two major patterns emerged from their narratives. First are Indonesians who consciously aspire for asylum-seeking status on their own and are aware of the status and how to apply for it. They are usually former technical trainees. Second are Indonesians who have no choice but to apply for asylum-seeking status and are seen in this study as the victims of the migration industry. They initially received information about work in Japan from brokers in Indonesia, and, for them, asylum seeking becomes primarily a survival strategy. The study therefore argues that this type of asylum seeking is shaped by several factors, including the seekers’ personal motives, and is facilitated by external conditions both in Japan and Indonesia, such as the existence of brokers and structural factors, including socioeconomic inequalities.
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Koning, Juliette. "Chinese Indonesians." In Routledge Handbook of Contemporary Indonesia, 177–86. New York : Routledge, 2018.: Routledge, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315628837-14.

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Dahlia and Marthoenis. "Psychotherapy for Indonesians." In Intercultural Psychotherapy, 349–59. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-24082-0_24.

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Saraswati, Asri. "Fraught Relations: Indonesian Modest Fashion, New York Catwalks, and the Spectacle of Travel." In Gender, Islam and Sexuality in Contemporary Indonesia, 67–85. Singapore: Springer Nature Singapore, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-99-5659-3_4.

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AbstractThis chapter examines the rise of Indonesian Muslim fashion, or “modest fashion,” and its connection to the New Yorkcatwalks. It seeks to uncover the interplay between the narratives of freedom and travel in creating the global capitalist pullfor modest fashionin Indonesia. Thus, it contributes to one of the aims of this volume to “explore the different ways in which modestyand commodification interact” (see Arnez 2023, this volume, Chap. 1). Contributing to studies examining political statements of designers of Islamic clothing for women, this chapter discusses the popularity of Indonesian modest fashion on the New York catwalks in the context of the Western world’s feelings of guilt towards Muslims, prompted by anti-Muslim sentiment. Displays of fashion by Indonesian designers on catwalks and the designers trotting New YorkCity were used as political statements and marketing tools. Particular attention will be paid to Indonesian designers’ engagement with the New York Fashion Week and the Couture Fashion Week, and the images of travel displayed. This article sheds light on the problematic relationship between Indonesian Muslim fashion and narratives of travel, specifically considering the highly politically contentious moment when refugees from Islamic countries were denied entry into the U.S. This created a platform for Indonesians to promote equality and stand against the racist travel ban posed upon Muslims, yet it also produced the myth that the freedom to travel is guaranteed.
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Errington, Joseph. "A Plural Unity." In Other Indonesians, C4—C4.N9. Oxford University PressNew York, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197563670.003.0004.

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Abstract Sociolinguistic dynamics in Kupang and Pontianak are examples of Indonesian’s plural unity in the nation at large. Here they can be considered together with other locales, where Indonesian is perceived as a threat to native languages, to locate those nonstandard varieties in a broader condition of linguistic plurality. Then they can be considered as grounds for Indonesians’ broader senses of national belonging with ideas about print-imaged languages discussed by Benedict Anderson, and about cultural intimacy discussed by Michael Herzfeld. Next the lexicons of modernity sketched earlier serve to characterize English as a lingua franca which is comparable with Indonesian, and for that reason an object of both desire and anxiety. Finally, an alternate success story about Indonesian’s internally plural character can be juxtaposed with accounts of sociolinguistic change in western Europe, including the kinds of linguistic superdiversity being attributed to dynamics of globalization.
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Lücking, Mirjam. "Indonesia and the Arab World, Then and Now." In Indonesians and Their Arab World, 26–55. Cornell University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.7591/cornell/9781501753114.003.0002.

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This chapter provides a historical overview of ambivalent encounters between Indonesia and the Arab world through findings that show the relationship between Indonesia and the Middle East. It recounts the Indonesians' earliest encounters with Arab traders in the seventh century, from confrontations with Indo Persian Sufi up to the current democratization process that have been marked by contradictory dynamics. It also explains how Arabs have been acknowledged as teachers of Islam and allies in the postcolonial nonbloc movement. The chapter describes the gloomy counterimage of the Arab world against which Indonesian officials and religious leaders drew the picture of a tolerant, pluralist Indonesian Islam. It mentions the key role of the mobility across the Indian Ocean in the formation of Islamic culture in Indonesia.
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Errington, Joseph. "A Valuable Paradox." In Other Indonesians, C1—C1.N32. Oxford University PressNew York, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197563670.003.0001.

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Abstract A key element of the “success story” of Indonesia’s development is its language, which has no native speakers. The author introduces Indonesian instead as part of a valuable paradox rooted in its historical and ideological connections with Malay, one of hundreds of Indonesia’s native, ethnic languages. The spread of knowledge of Indonesian is shown to have been enabled also by the development of urban centers as “blind spots” for a state project of linguistic modernization. This chapter situates Indonesian in two of these towns, Kupang and Pontianak, as a language spoken by college students, showing how it figures in their biographies, educations, and aspirations, notwithstanding differences in ethnic background and native language. A contrastive approach is outlined to ways they speak which brackets broad assumptions about linguistic and national “nativeness” that lack fit with the “Indonesian case.” This provides an an alternative approach to uses and values of the language of this plural, postcolonial nation.
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Errington, Joseph. "A Provincial Indonesian." In Other Indonesians, C2—C2.N15. Oxford University PressNew York, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197563670.003.0002.

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Abstract Residents of Kupang with positions and allegiances closely tied to standard Indonesian much more commonly speak the town’s distinctly substandard, “provincial” vernacular. This situation is described by first considering the ways college students “mix” standard Indonesian and global English with the town’s vernacular. This provides background, in turn, for recognizing the role of nonstandard Indonesians in the interactional bracketing of ethnic differences, and engaging topically with modernity of the nation at large. This in turn helps consider seeming incompatible ways that college students differentiate and value standard and nonstandard Indonesian. Finally, the language of this regional city is considered in relation to infrastructures of mobility that are giving it new roles in the province at large .
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Calabresi, Steven Gow. "Indonesia." In The History and Growth of Judicial Review, Volume 2, 251–66. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190075736.003.0011.

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This chapter highlights the origins and growth of Indonesian judicial review. Indonesia today is a constitutional democracy that has attained surprising success in eliminating hyper-presidentialism by implementing important checks and balances on presidential power; by separating executive, legislative, and judicial power; and by attaining rapidly an astonishing amount of decentralization since 1998. That degree of checks and balances and of decentralization has undoubtedly made Indonesians much freer than they were under President Suharto’s dictatorship. The Indonesian Constitutional Court seems to function well and enjoys the confidence of the people. Looked at from an American perspective, however, Indonesia is a constitutional democracy, which does not yet fully protect freedom of expression, freedom of religion, or economic freedoms to the extent that those freedoms are protected by the U.S. Supreme Court. Indonesia’s Bill of Rights and its system of judicial review originated for rights from wrongs reasons, because of borrowing, and because power is sufficiently divided in Indonesia, as a result of the separation of powers and federalism, so that there is political space in which the Supreme Court can operate.
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Fibiger, Mattias. "In the Shadow of Vietnam." In Suharto's Cold War, 46—C2T1. Oxford University PressNew York, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197667224.003.0003.

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Abstract This chapter argues that the September Thirtieth Movement plunged Indonesia into crisis and inaugurated a critical juncture in which Suharto launched his Cold War. The Indonesian army orchestrated an anticommunist politicide in which a broad coalition of civil society groups participated. Suharto also set in motion a slow-moving coup d’état that entailed efforts to undermine Sukarno, forge a political coalition, establish institutional authority, and secure international support. Indonesia’s deepening economic crisis provided a critical point of leverage. Suharto and the army worked to starve the Sukarno regime of international capital and exacerbate the misery that drove hundreds of thousands of Indonesians onto the streets to protest. By March 1966, Sukarno had relented and signed the Supersemar entrusting Suharto with the authority to restore order.
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Conference papers on the topic "Indonesians"

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Natalia, Johanna. "Indonesian Couples’ Perception of Spouse’s Support during Labour and Childbirth." In International Association of Cross Cultural Psychology Congress. International Association for Cross-Cultural Psychology, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.4087/ahdi6579.

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The World Health Organisation (WHO, 2017) stressed the importance of support during labour and childbirth to the women. Indonesia’s Ministry of Health in cooperation with the WHO, Indonesian Obstetrics and Gynaecology Association, and Indonesian Midwives Association recommended a support person (family member) to accompany women during labour and childbirth (Kementrian Kesehatan Republik Indonesia, 2013). However, in most parts of Indonesia, this recommendation has not been applied properly. With support from the management of the maternity centre, this study offered the women to have the husband’s support during labour and childbirth in order to understand the women’s and husband’s perspective of support during labour and childbirth. This study used a qualitative method, which was very rare, particularly in Indonesia. A quantitative method was included to investigate the couples’ perception of support during labour and childbirth. Eighteen couples were interviewed at three different times: before, during, and after childbirth. This study found similar themes between the women and husbands’ perception about support during labour and childbirth except one woman who felt negatively because her husband agreed with the midwife’s recommendation to do caesarean while the woman expected the normal childbirth. In addition, cross tabulation was added to understand the couples’ perception. This study contributed a new perspective of couples’ perception about support during labour and childbirth. Based on the finding, this study recommended maternity centres or local health care centres to provide information about the importance of support during labour and childbirth via posters, pamphlets, and leaflets. In addition, this study recommended to the Indonesian Ministry of Health to use newspapers, television, radio, and social media to inform all Indonesians about the importance of support during labour and childbirth via programs, community service announcements, and advertisements.
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Prameswari, Intan, and Haruo Hibino. "Indonesian Cultural Design Concept: Analysis on Association of Indonesians’ Design Perception and Culture." In International Conference on Aesthetics and the Sciences of Art. Bandung, Indonesia: Bandung Institute of Technology, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.51555/338630.

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Hapsari, Intan. "A Study of Compliment Responses Used by Indonesians." In Proceedings of the 5th International Conference on Science, Education and Technology, ISET 2019, 29th June 2019, Semarang, Central Java, Indonesia. EAI, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4108/eai.29-6-2019.2290441.

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Wardhani, Novia Wahyu, and Muhammad Fauzi Fitri Andika. "Inclusive Education and Social Justice for All Indonesians." In 2nd International Conference on Innovation in Education and Pedagogy (ICIEP 2020). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/assehr.k.211219.025.

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Laoh, Enrico, Isti Surjandari, and Limisgy Ramadhina Febirautami. "Indonesians' Song Lyrics Topic Modelling Using Latent Dirichlet Allocation." In 2018 5th International Conference on Information Science and Control Engineering (ICISCE). IEEE, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icisce.2018.00064.

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Baito, Linus. "Doxological Aspect: Concept of Intercultural Mission in Indonesians Chinese." In International Conference on Theology, Humanities, and Christian Education (ICONTHCE 2021). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/assehr.k.220702.008.

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Mangundjaya, Wustari. "Is There Cultural Change In The National Cultures Of Indonesia?" In International Association of Cross Cultural Psychology Congress. International Association for Cross-Cultural Psychology, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.4087/zfmu4427.

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Understanding of the national culture as well as the local culture can give people an advantage in understanding and developing intercultural knowledge and skills. It is also useful for achieving a successful life in this challenging global world. In order to understand a nation’s people it is important to understand their values and culture. Indonesia consists of thousands of islands and people of various ethnicities, which consequently affect Indonesia’s culture as a whole nation. This research was done at one of Indonesia’s stateowned companies. It comprised 2025 respondents from various ethnic backgrounds such as: Balinese, Batak, Javanese, Minangkabau, Sundanese and others. The questionnaire used was developed on the basis of Hofstede’s work on values. The study showed that respondents (the employees of Company XYZ) were high on Uncertainty Avoidance, Power Distance, Future Time Orientation, Individualism, and Masculinity. This findings is different from the stereotype of Indonesian people as well as from Hofstede’s findings (Hofstede & Hofstede, 2005), which indicated that Indonesian people score higher on the Collectivist and Feminist dimensions, and lower onUncertainty Avoidance.This raises the question of whether there has been a cultural change or whether the results reflect only the impact of organizational culture. Although this study consists of a large sample, the results cannot be generalized to all Indonesian people. In this regard, future research should be carried out in order to obtain an accurate profile of Indonesia, taking into account that Indonesia is very diverse country.
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Tauhid, Syafi Muhammad, and Yova Ruldeviyani. "Sentiment Analysis of Indonesians Response to Influencer in Social Media." In 2020 7th International Conference on Information Technology, Computer, and Electrical Engineering (ICITACEE). IEEE, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icitacee50144.2020.9239218.

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Suleeman, Julia. "Cultural Norms and Practices in Resilience of Indonesians’ Natural Disaster Survivors." In International Conference on Psychological Studies (ICPSYCHE 2020). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/assehr.k.210423.048.

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Saputra, Wahyu Nanda Eka, Yulia Ayriza, Agus Supriyanto, and Budi Astuti. "The Indonesians’ Peaceful Mind: A Gadamerian Hermeneutic Study of the Markesot Bertutur." In 1st International Conference on Folklore, Language, Education and Exhibition (ICOFLEX 2019). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/assehr.k.201230.052.

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Reports on the topic "Indonesians"

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Malamassam, Meirina Ayumi. Mobile Indonesians powering the economy. Edited by Ria Ernunsari and Sara Phillips. Monash University, November 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.54377/09b5-586b.

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editors, EAF. Indonesians set to roll the dice on Prabowo. East Asia Forum, December 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.59425/eabc.1702296026.

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Ida, Rachmah. Social media brings young Indonesians in from political fringe. Edited by Ria Ernunsari and Sam Hendricks. Monash University, September 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.54377/40f8-1779.

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Amanta, Felippa, and Iqbal Wibisono. Negative Effects of Non-Tariff Trade Barriers on the Welfare of Indonesians. Jakarta, Indonesia: Center for Indonesian Policy Studies, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.35497/341329.

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Sumpter, Cameron, and Yuslikha K. Wardhani. Hopes and Hurdles for Indonesia’s National Action Plan to Prevent Violent Extremism. RESOLVE Network, March 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.37805/pn2022.2.sea.

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This policy note outlines the key details of Indonesia’s National Action Plan for P/CVE before discussing the evident challenges and opportunities moving forward. The ambitious strategy (known by its Indonesian acronym, RAN PE) could decentralize P/CVE programming in Indonesia, facilitate the formalization of working relationships between civil society organizations and local government authorities, mainstream gender perspectives, and streamline activities to improve targeting and avoid overlap. But constructive outcomes will depend on overcoming thorny obstacles, such as coordinating the varied interests, motivations, and capacities of the many stakeholders involved, and allaying concerns over applicable definitions that some perceive as overly broad and possibly divisive.
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Editors, Intersections. Citizen Ethics as Living Traditions. Intersections, Social Science Research Council, January 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.35650/int.4034.d.2024.

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Bhattarai, Sankalpa, Hsien-Yao Chee, Andrew Japri, Elvan Wiyarta, and Benjamin Anderson. The Epidemiology of Human Respiratory Viruses in Indonesia: A Systematic Review. INPLASY - International Platform of Registered Systematic Review and Meta-analysis Protocols, November 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.37766/inplasy2022.11.0015.

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Review question / Objective: To identify published articles related to the epidemiology of human respiratory viruses in Indonesia. Condition being studied: Viral respiratory disease among humans in Indonesia. Eligibility criteria: The inclusion and exclusion criteria for English and Indonesian language journal articles included published scientific journal entries which were also epidemiological investigations or clinical case reports conducted on humans in Indonesia. All reviews, commentaries, perspectives, and personal opinions were excluded, along with any entry that was a diagnostic assay evaluation.
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Revina, Shintia, Rezanti Putri Pramana, Rizki Fillaili, and Daniel Suryadarma. Systemic Constraints Facing Teacher Professional Development in a Middle-Income Country: Indonesia’s Experience Over Four Decades. Research on Improving Systems of Education (RISE), November 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.35489/bsg-rise-wp_2020/054.

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Despite government efforts to reform teacher professional development (TPD) in the past four decades, Indonesian teacher quality remains low. Why have the improvement efforts failed? In the present study we investigate what caused these reforms to fail from two angles. First, we examine the efficacy of the latest teacher professional development (TPD) initiative in Indonesia, Pengembangan Keprofesian Berkelanjutan or PKB (Continuing Professional Development), and identify the factors affecting its efficacy. We found that some essential features of effective TPD are missing in PKB. The PKB programme has not targeted teachers based on years of experience, has not followed up teachers with post-training activities, has not incorporated teaching practice through lesson enactment, and has not built upon teacher existing practice. Second, our analysis demonstrates that PKB's weaknesses have existed in Indonesia's previous TPD initiatives as far back as four decades ago. This indicates that the long-term problem of TPD’s ineffectiveness is driven by different elements of the education system beyond the TPD’s technical and operational aspects. Our system-level analysis points out that merely improving the technical aspects of TPD would be insufficient given the Indonesian education system’s lack of coherence surrounding teacher quality. The problems surrounding the provision of effective TPD is more complex than simply a matter of replacing the “old” with the “new” initiative. The change requires a reorientation of the education system to produce high-quality teachers.
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Revina, Shintia, Rezanti Putri Pramana, Rizki Fillaili, and Daniel Suryadarma. Systemic Constraints Facing Teacher Professional Developmentin a Middle-Income Country: Indonesia’s Experience Over Four Decades. Research on Improving Systems of Education (RISE), November 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.35489/bsgrisewp_2020/054.

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Despite government efforts to reform teacher professional development (TPD) in the past four decades, Indonesian teacher quality remains low. Why have the improvement efforts failed? In the present study we investigate what caused these reforms to fail from two angles. First, we examine the efficacy of the latest teacher professional development (TPD) initiative in Indonesia, Pengembangan Keprofesian Berkelanjutan or PKB (Continuing Professional Development), and identify the factors affecting its efficacy. We found that some essential features of effective TPD are missing in PKB. The PKB programme has not targeted teachers based on years of experience, has not followed up teachers with post-training activities, has not incorporated teaching practice through lesson enactment, and has not built upon teacher existing practice. Second, our analysis demonstrates that PKB's weaknesses have existed in Indonesia's previous TPD initiatives as far back as four decades ago. This indicates that the long-term problem of TPD’s ineffectiveness is driven by different elements of the education system beyond the TPD’s technical and operational aspects. Our system-level analysis points out that merely improving the technical aspects of TPD would be insufficient given the Indonesian education system’s lack of coherence surrounding teacher quality. The problems surrounding the provision of effective TPD is more complex than simply a matter of replacing the “old” with the “new” initiative. The change requires a reorientation of the education system to produce high-quality teachers.
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Goode, Kayla, and Heeu Millie Kim. Indonesia’s AI Promise in Perspective. Center for Security and Emerging Technology, August 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.51593/2021ca001.

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The United States and China are keeping an eye on Indonesia’s artificial intelligence potential given the country’s innovation-driven national strategy and flourishing AI industry. China views Indonesia as an anchor for its economic, digital, and political inroads in Southeast Asia and has invested aggressively in new partnerships. The United States, with robust political and economic relations rooted in shared democratic ideals, has an opportunity to leverage its comparative advantages and tap into Indonesia’s AI potential through high-level agreements.
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