Week | Topic | Content and Reading Assignment | Teaching Activities and Homework | 1 | Introduction
2/20 | Syllabus
Evaluation Criteria
Class Regulations | Introduction of syllabus and regulations
Students choose the 6 (six) weeks in which they want to submit their individual essays.
No Homework | 2 | Colonialism and Nationalism
2/27 | The session investigates the influence of colonialism on the contemporary Southeast Asian countries. Where are the differences between various colonial policies in the region? How did different forms of nationalism emerge against colonial rule?
Required Readings
Sidel, John T. 2012. “The Fate of Nationalism in the New States: Southeast Asia in Comparative Historical Perspective”, Comparative Studies in History and Society 54(1): 114-144.
Further Readings
Booth, Anne, 2007. Colonial Legacies: Economic and Social Development in East and Southeast Asia, Honolulu HI: University of Hawai’i Press.
Bertrand, Jacques. 2013. Political Change in Southeast Asia. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press [Chapter 1 “Understanding Political Change in Southeast Asia”, pp. 1-17]. | - Lecture
- Essay (only for those who chose to submit it)
- Presentation of the readings (only for one or two students who chose to do it)
- Other activities: games, simulation, debates
| 3 | Socio-political turmoil
3/6 | The session discusses the impact of social movements and contentious politics to socio-political change in Southeast Asia, as well as how it influences the notions of democracy, authoritarianism and populism. The session also compares with the experiences of East Asian countries such as Japan, Taiwan and South Korea.
Required Readings
Slater, Dan, 2009. “Revolutions, Crackdowns, and Quiescence: Communal Elites and Democratic Mobilization in Southeast Asia”, American Journal of Sociology 115(1): 203-254.
Further Readings
Fukuoka, Yuki, 2015. “Who Brought Down the Dictator? A Critical Reassessment of So-Called ‘People Power’ Revolutions in the Philippines and Indonesia”, The Pacific Review 28(3): 411-433.
Tarrow, Sidney and Charles Tilly, 2007. “Contentious Politics and Social Movements”, in Boix, Carles & Susan C. Stokes, eds., 2007. The Oxford Handbook on Comparative Politics, Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 435-460. | - Lecture
- Essay (only for those who chose to submit it)
- Presentation of the readings (only for one or two students who chose to do it)
- Other activities: games, simulation, debates
| 4 | Development, Modernization and Institutionalization
3/13
| The lecture investigates the links between the nature of political regimes, modernization, economic growth and development, to understand the relations between authoritarianism and the developmental state approach. The course also compares with the modernization in East Asia.
Required Readings
Sinpeng, Aim and Aries A. Arugay, 2015. “The Middle Class and Democracy in Southeast Asia”, in William Case, ed., The Routledge Handbook of Southeast Asian Democratization, London: Routledge, pp. 102-116.
Thompson, Mark R. 2010. “Modernization Theory’s Last Redoubt: Modernization and Democratization in East and Southeast Asia,” in Yin-Wah Chu, ed., East Asian Democracies after Twenty Years, London: Routledge, pp. 85-101.
Further Readings
McKinnon, Katharine, 2018. “What is Development in Southeast Asia and Who Benefits? Progress, Power, and Prosperity”, in McGregor, Andrew, Lisa Law and Fiona Miller, eds., The Routledge Handbook of Southeast Asian Development, Abingdon: Routledge, pp. 14-26.
Pepinsky, Thomas B., 2009. Economic Crisis and the Breakdown of Authoritarian Regimes: Indonesia and Malaysia in Comparative Perspective, New York: Cambridge University Press. | - Lecture
- Essay (only for those who chose to submit it)
- Presentation of the readings (only for one or two students who chose to do it)
- Other activities: games, simulation, debates
| 5 | (Electoral) Democracy vs Authoritarianism
3/20
| This session explores different elections and popular suffrage taking place in Southeast Asia. While some elections are relatively free and fair, other merely gives legitimacy to authoritarian regimes. How shall we understand electoral “democracy” in an authoritarian setting? How do we see China’s role in the autocratization of Southeast Asia?
Required Readings
Morgenbesser, Lee & Thomas B. Pepinsky, 2019. “Elections as Causes of Democratization: Southeast Asia in Comparative Perspective”, Comparative Political Studies 52(1): 3-35.
Morgenbesser, Lee, 2016. Behind the Façade: Elections under Authoritarianism in Southeast Asia, Albany NY: SUNY Press (Ch.1)
Further Readings
Hicken, Allan, 2008. “Developing Democracies in Southeast Asia: Theorizing the Role of Parties and Elections,” in Erik M. Kuhonta, Dan Slater, and Tuong Vu, eds., Southeast Asia in Political Science: Theory, Region, and Qualitative Analysis, Stanford CA: Stanford University Press, pp. 80-101.
Simandjuntak, Deasy, 2018. “The State of Democracy in Southeast Asia”, Heinrich Böll Stiftung commentary,19 October, https://th.boell.org/en/2018/10/19/state-democracy-southeast-asia | - Lecture
- Essay (only for those who chose to submit it)
- Presentation of the readings (only for one or two students who chose to do it)
- Other activities: games, simulation, debates
| 6 | Civil Society vs Authoritarianism
3/27 | The session examines the impact of the emergence of “civil society” to democratization in Southeast Asia. What are “civil society”, and which kind of civic associations have been actively pushing for democratization in the region? Are there instances in which “civil society” contribute instead to anti-democratic movement and mobilization of illiberal values? What can Southeast Asian countries learn from East Asian countries such as Taiwan?
Required Readings
Alagappa, Muthiah, 2004. “Civil Society and Political Change: An Analytical Framework”, in Muthiah Alagappa, ed., Civil Society and Political Change in Asia: Expanding and Contracting Democratic Space, Stanford CA: Stanford University Press, pp. 25-57.
Weiss, Meredith L., 2015. “Civil Society and Democratization in Southeast Asia: What is the Connection?”, in William Case, ed., The Routledge Handbook of Southeast Asian Democratization, London: Routledge, pp. 135-146.
Further Readings
Kuhonta, Eric M. and Aim Sinpeng, 2014. “Democratic Regression in Thailand: The Ambivalent Role of Civil Society and Political Institutions”, Contemporary Southeast Asia 36(3): 333-355.
Hsiao, Hsin-Huang Michael, and Ming-sho Ho. "Civil society and democracy-making in Taiwan: Reexamining the link." East Asia's New Democracies. Routledge, 2010. 61-82. | - Lecture
- Essay (only for those who chose to submit it)
- Presentation of the readings (only for one or two students who chose to do it)
- Other activities: games, simulation, debates
| 7 | Holiday
Children’s Day
4/3 | No Class | No Class | 8 | Patronage politics, Clientelism and Democracy
4/10 | This session investigates how democracy in the quality of Southeast Asian region is limited by clientelism and patronage politics. How does persistent patronage practices, such as vote-buying, which is sustained by “culture” of patron-client relations curb the efforts towards good governance and substantial democracy?
Required Readings
Aspinall, Edward, 2015. “Money Politics: Patronage and Clientelism in Southeast Asia”, in William Case, ed., The Routledge Handbook of Southeast Asian Democratization, London: Routledge, pp. 299-313.
Simandjuntak, Deasy, 2015. “Persistent Patronage: Explaining the Popularity of Former Convicts as Candidates in Indonesia’s Regional Elections”, Singapore: ISEAS Perspectives No. 55 [6 October 2015]
Further Readings
Dettman, Sebastian and Meredith L. Weiss, 2018. “Has Patronage Lost Its Punch in Malaysia?”, The Round Table 107(6): 739-754.
Tomsa, Dirk and Andreas Ufen, eds., 2013. Party Politics in Southeast Asia: Clientelism and Electoral Competition in Indonesia, Thailand, and the Philippines, London: Routledge | - Lecture
- Essay (only for those who chose to submit it)
- Presentation of the readings (only for one or two students who chose to do it)
- Other activities: games, simulation, debates
| 9 | Religion and democracy
4/17 | In this session, students will examine the role of identity in mainstream politics in some of the countries in Southeast Asia. With regards to majority religions, what are the role of Buddhism and Islam in the politics of some countries in the regions? What is the influence of ethno-religious identities in the formation of political allegiance during elections? How are ethno-religious identities mobilized to gain votes? What is the role of ethno-religious identities in communal conflicts?
Required Readings
Hamayotsu, Kikue, 2008. “Beyond Doctrine and Dogma: Religion and Politics in Southeast Asia,” in Erik M. Kuhonta, Dan Slater, and Tuong Vu, eds., Southeast Asia in Political Science: Theory, Region, and Qualitative Analysis, Stanford CA: Stanford University Press, pp. 171-198.
Further Readings
Hefner, Robert W., 2000. Civil Islam: Muslims and Democratization in Indonesia, Princeton NJ: Princeton University Press [Chapter One: ‘Democratization in an Age of Religious Revitalization’, pp. 3- 20].
Fink, Christina, 2018. “Myanmar: Religious Minorities and Constitutional Questions”, Asian Affairs 49(2): 259-277 | - Lecture
- Essay (only for those who chose to submit it)
- Presentation of the readings (only for one or two students who chose to do it)
- Other activities: games, simulation, debates
| 10 | The military and democracy
4/24
| The session explores the role of military in impeding (or fostering?) democracy. A special attention will be given to the recent military coup in Myanmar. In contrast, in Indonesia, in the aftermath of the democratic reform in 1998, the military withdrew from its special position in the parliament and the notorious “dual function” which sustained the authoritarian regime of Soeharto was abolished.
Required Readings
Alagappa, Muthiah, 2013. “Military and democratic development in Asia: a complex narrative.” in Dennis C. Blair (ed.). Military Engagement: Influencing Armed Forces Worldwide to Support Democratic Transitions. Brookings Institution Press. (Ch.1)
Further Readings
Lindsey, Tim, 2014. “Unlike any land you know about? Myanmar, reform and the Indonesia model.” In Melissa Crouch and Tim Lindsey (eds.), Law, Society and Transition in Myanmar. Hart Publishing. | - Lecture
- Essay (only for those who chose to submit it)
- Presentation of the readings (only for one or two students who chose to do it)
- Other activities: games, simulation, debates
| 11 | Populism and Democracy
5/1
| In this session students discuss the persistence of authoritarian populist regimes in Southeast Asia. How does populism manifest in the region’s hybrid democracies and how does populism impact their governance?
Required Readings
Robison, Richard and Vedi Hadiz, 2020. “Populism in Southeast Asia: A Vehicle for Reform or a Tool for Despots?”, in Toby Carroll et al., eds., The Political Economy of Southeast Asia: Politics and Uneven Development under Hyperglobalisation [4th ed.], Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 155-175.
Case, William, 2017. Populist Threats and Democracy’s Fate in Southeast Asia: Thailand, the Philippines and Indonesia, London: Routledge. (Ch. to be announced)
Further Readings
Mietzner, Marcus, 2016. Reinventing Asian Populism: Jokowi’s Rise, Democracy, and Political Contestation in Indonesia, Washington DC: East-West Center Policy Studies No. 72. | - Lecture
- Essay (only for those who chose to submit it)
- Presentation of the readings (only for one or two students who chose to do it)
- Other activities: games, simulation, debates
| 12 | Indonesia: democratic challenges and the state of precarity of ethnic Chinese-Indonesian
5/8 | As the largest Southeast Asian nation (with a population of 270 million people), Indonesia’s state-building and democratic trajectory, i.e. democratic reforms and regression, has influenced the region in general. In this session, students examine Indonesia’s major political events since its independent in 1945 in order to scrutinize the episodes of patronage politics, ethno-religious conflicts and mobilizations, democratization and majority-minority relations.
This session zooms into one important aspect of Indonesia’s identity-politics: the position of ethnic Chinese-Indonesian. On the one hand, the New Order had limited their participation in politics and government, yet on the other hand, Chinese-Indonesians hold the largest share in Indonesia’s economy. There have been various episodes in Indonesia’s politics, in which Chinese-Indonesians have been made scapegoat amidst political turmoil and elite entrenched interests. How do Chinese-Indonesian communities navigate their position within the society in general?
Required Readings
Chong, Wu Ling "Rethinking the Position of Ethnic Chinese Indonesians." SEJARAH: Journal of the Department of History 25.2 (2016)
Warburton, Eve and Edward Aspinall, 2019. “Explaining Indonesia’s Democratic Regression: Structure, Agency and Popular Opinion”, Contemporary Southeast Asia 41(2): 255-285.
Further Readings
Simandjuntak, Deasy. "Disciplining the accepted and amputating the deviants: Religious nationalism and segregated citizenship in Indonesia." Asian Journal of Law and Society 8.1 (2021): 88-107 | - Lecture
- Essay (only for those who chose to submit it)
- Presentation of the readings (only for one or two students who chose to do it)
- Other activities: games, simulation, debates
| 13 | Malaysia: recent socio-political dynamics
5/15
| In this session, students will become acquainted with Malaysian politics in general. Special attention will be given to the groundbreaking 14th General Election in 2018, in which the long- standing Barisan Nasional government lost to the opposition Pakatan Harapan. The recent political turmoil, however, further changed the situation. Another important topic to be discussed is the role of the country’s racial preferential policy.
Required Readings
Moten, Abdul Rashid, 2019. “The 14th General Elections in Malaysia: Ethnicity, Party Polarization, and the End of the Dominant Party System.” Asian Survey 59(3): 500-20.
Lee, Hwok-Aun, 2017, “Malaysia’s Bumiputera preferential regime and transformation agenda: Modified programmes, unchanged system” Trends in Southeast Asia 2017 No. 22. Singapore: ISEAS.
Further Readings
Hutchinson, Francis E., and Lee Hwok Aun, eds., 2019, The Defeat of Barisan Nasional: Missed Signs Or Late Surge? ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute. | - Lecture
- Essay (only for those who chose to submit it)
- Presentation of the readings (only for one or two students who chose to do it)
- Other activities: games, simulation, debates
| 14 | Singapore: politics and society
5/22 | In this session, students will be introduced to various aspects of politics and society in the multicultural city-state.
Required Readings
Tan, Kenneth Paul, 2012, "The ideology of pragmatism: Neo-liberal globalisation and political authoritarianism in Singapore." Journal of Contemporary Asia 42.1: 67-92
Chua, Beng Huat, 2003, "Multiculturalism in Singapore: An instrument of social control." Race & Class 44.3: 58-77.
Further Readings
Rahim, Lily Zubaidah, 2012, “Governing Muslims in Singapore’s secular authoritarian state.” Australian Journal of International Affairs 66(2): 169-185. | - Lecture
- Essay (only for those who chose to submit it)
- Presentation of the readings (only for one or two students who chose to do it)
- Other activities: games, simulation, debates
| 15 | Myanmar: democratic regression
5/29 | This session explores Myanmar’s democratic trajectory which has recently been halted by a military coup. It also touches upon the plight of the Rohingya ethnic minority.
Required Readings
Hein, Ye Myo. 2022, "The Root Causes of Myanmar’s Coup Go Deeper." The Wilson Center.
Egreteau, Renaud, 2016. Caretaking Democratization: the Military and Political Change in Myanmar. Oxford University Press.
Further Readings
Thuzar, Moe, 2019. “Repatriating the Rohingya: what regional cooperation can and cannot do.” ISEAS Perspective 2019(73) (13 Sept.) | - Lecture
- Essay (only for those who chose to submit it)
- Presentation of the readings (only for one or two students who chose to do it)
- Other activities: games, simulation, debates
| 16 | Cambodia and Vietnam and their different political stances China
6/5 | This session explores the different political stances that Cambodia and Vietnam have towards China. Cambodia’s economy is dependent on China, while Vietnam is traditionally against China.
Required Readings
Po, Sovinda & Kearrin Sims, 2022. The Myth of Non-interference: Chinese Foreign Policy in Cambodia, Asian Studies Review, 46:1, 36-54, DOI: 10.1080/10357823.2021.1887813
Thanh Hai, Do. "Vietnam and China: ideological bedfellows, strange dreamers." Journal of Contemporary East Asia Studies 10.2 (2021): 162-182
Further Readings
Chandarith, Neak, and Sam Ath Sambath Sreysour. "Cambodia and the Politics of Populism and Nationalism in the South China Sea." Populism, Nationalism and South China Sea Dispute. Springer, Singapore, 2022. 139-157. | - Lecture
- Essay (only for those who chose to submit it)
- Presentation of the readings (only for one or two students who chose to do it)
- Other activities: games, simulation, debates
| 17 | Final Presentation Week
6/12 | Presentation | Presentation | 18 | Final Paper Week
6/19 | No class | Submission of Final Papers |
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