Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 312
Trim: 6 x 8½
978-0-7425-3827-6 • Paperback • March 2005 • $71.00 • (£55.00)
978-1-4616-0465-5 • eBook • March 2005 • $67.00 • (£52.00)
Angus McIntyre is senior lecturer in the Department of Politics at LaTrobe University.
Chapter 1 Introduction
Chapter 2 The Return to the 1945 Constitution
Part 3 Part I
Chapter 4 The Personal Rule of Sukarno
Chapter 5 Suffering from the Quiet: Sukarno's Desolation and His Politics of Being Central
Chapter 6 Aging and Fear of Death: Sukarno's Politics of Rejuvenation and His Quest for Immortality
Chapter 7 Sukarno: Abandoned by History?
Part 8 Part II
Chapter 9 The Personal Rule of Soeharto
Chapter 10 Soeharto's Composure
Part 11 Part III
Chapter 12 Megawati and the Emergence of Constitutional Rule
Chapter 13 Childhood and Youth of Megawati Sukarnoputri
Chapter 14 Megawati Sukarnoputri's Political Apprenticeship
Chapter 15 Challenging Soeharto
Chapter 16 The Fall of Soeharto
Chapter 17 Democracy Returns
Chapter 18 A Female President?
Chapter 19 Megawati Sukarnoputri as Vice President
Chapter 20 President Megawati Sukarnoputri
Chapter 21 Conclusion
Chapter 22 Postscript: The Indonesian Parliamentary Elections of 2004
This book is indeed a good contribution to comparative politics and political science in general as well as to the political history of Indonesia.
— Contemporary Southeast Asia Contemporary Southeast Asia
Imaginative and insightful. . . . This is certainly and important book with which the definitive study of Indonesian presidency will have to engage.
— Political Studies Review
The Indonesian Presidency is an absorbing book. It takes us confidently into the intricacies of politics at the top, drawing on a wide range of sources and on the author's skills as a psychobiographer, a linguist, an historian, and a political scientist. This fluent, clear-eyed study is free of jargon and full of insights. It benefits enormously (as its readers will) from McIntyre's three and a half decades of sustained involvement with Indonesia.
— David Chandler, author of A History of Cambodia