Crafting a Democratic Enclave on the Cyberspace: Case Studies of Malaysia, Indonesia, and Singapore

As an antithesis of “authoritarian enclave” which has been well-established in the comparative politics literature, “democratic enclave” points to the institution of a state or the unambiguous regulatory space in society “where the authoritarian regime’s writ is substantively limited and is replaced...

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Main Author: Yangyue Liu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2011-01-01
Series:Journal of Current Southeast Asian Affairs
Subjects:
320
322
323
Online Access:http://hup.sub.uni-hamburg.de/giga/jsaa/article/view/500
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spelling doaj-ba7cb4250295406587019957eb1eded42020-11-25T03:16:17ZengSAGE PublishingJournal of Current Southeast Asian Affairs1868-10341868-48822011-01-013043355Crafting a Democratic Enclave on the Cyberspace: Case Studies of Malaysia, Indonesia, and SingaporeYangyue LiuAs an antithesis of “authoritarian enclave” which has been well-established in the comparative politics literature, “democratic enclave” points to the institution of a state or the unambiguous regulatory space in society “where the authoritarian regime’s writ is substantively limited and is replaced by an adherence to recognizably democratic norms and procedures” (Gilley 2010). In this sense, the Internet space, embodied by information and communication technologies, has great potential to play such a role, since its “inherited” properties of decentralization and anonymity would inevitably breach the authoritarian rules. However, a closer look at three Southeast Asian states, Malaysia, Singapore and the “New Order” Indonesia whose regimes were characterized by authoritarianism when Internet was initially developed, reveals different trajectories. In the “New Order” Indonesia and Malaysia, the governments consciously left the Internet space uncontrolled; the online media developed independently, vibrantly, and professionally, especially in the Malaysian case; and there were strong connections between online and offline contentious politics. These elements made the Internet space in Indonesia and Malaysia a successful case of democratic enclave. Based on these criteria, however, the Internet space in Singapore has not achieved similar status. This paper analyses the different outcomes of enclave creation on the cyberspace among these countries. It argues that elite conflict and the strength of civil society are the two major factors that shape the differences. In this sense, the political contexts are of great importance for the understanding of Internet’s political impacts.http://hup.sub.uni-hamburg.de/giga/jsaa/article/view/500Political ScienceMalaysiaIndonesiaSingaporedemocratic enclavedemocratizationinformation technology320322323MalaysiaIndonesiaSingapore1990-2010
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yangyue Liu
spellingShingle Yangyue Liu
Crafting a Democratic Enclave on the Cyberspace: Case Studies of Malaysia, Indonesia, and Singapore
Journal of Current Southeast Asian Affairs
Political Science
Malaysia
Indonesia
Singapore
democratic enclave
democratization
information technology
320
322
323
Malaysia
Indonesia
Singapore
1990-2010
author_facet Yangyue Liu
author_sort Yangyue Liu
title Crafting a Democratic Enclave on the Cyberspace: Case Studies of Malaysia, Indonesia, and Singapore
title_short Crafting a Democratic Enclave on the Cyberspace: Case Studies of Malaysia, Indonesia, and Singapore
title_full Crafting a Democratic Enclave on the Cyberspace: Case Studies of Malaysia, Indonesia, and Singapore
title_fullStr Crafting a Democratic Enclave on the Cyberspace: Case Studies of Malaysia, Indonesia, and Singapore
title_full_unstemmed Crafting a Democratic Enclave on the Cyberspace: Case Studies of Malaysia, Indonesia, and Singapore
title_sort crafting a democratic enclave on the cyberspace: case studies of malaysia, indonesia, and singapore
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Journal of Current Southeast Asian Affairs
issn 1868-1034
1868-4882
publishDate 2011-01-01
description As an antithesis of “authoritarian enclave” which has been well-established in the comparative politics literature, “democratic enclave” points to the institution of a state or the unambiguous regulatory space in society “where the authoritarian regime’s writ is substantively limited and is replaced by an adherence to recognizably democratic norms and procedures” (Gilley 2010). In this sense, the Internet space, embodied by information and communication technologies, has great potential to play such a role, since its “inherited” properties of decentralization and anonymity would inevitably breach the authoritarian rules. However, a closer look at three Southeast Asian states, Malaysia, Singapore and the “New Order” Indonesia whose regimes were characterized by authoritarianism when Internet was initially developed, reveals different trajectories. In the “New Order” Indonesia and Malaysia, the governments consciously left the Internet space uncontrolled; the online media developed independently, vibrantly, and professionally, especially in the Malaysian case; and there were strong connections between online and offline contentious politics. These elements made the Internet space in Indonesia and Malaysia a successful case of democratic enclave. Based on these criteria, however, the Internet space in Singapore has not achieved similar status. This paper analyses the different outcomes of enclave creation on the cyberspace among these countries. It argues that elite conflict and the strength of civil society are the two major factors that shape the differences. In this sense, the political contexts are of great importance for the understanding of Internet’s political impacts.
topic Political Science
Malaysia
Indonesia
Singapore
democratic enclave
democratization
information technology
320
322
323
Malaysia
Indonesia
Singapore
1990-2010
url http://hup.sub.uni-hamburg.de/giga/jsaa/article/view/500
work_keys_str_mv AT yangyueliu craftingademocraticenclaveonthecyberspacecasestudiesofmalaysiaindonesiaandsingapore
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