scholarly journals The Perils and Challenges of Advancing Economic Governance Reform in Indonesia: An Endeavor by the Technocrats in the New Order Era

Author(s):  
Vishnu Juwono
2020 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 121
Author(s):  
Vishnu Juwono

There were high hopes that Gus Dur, after being appointed by the People Consultative Assembly (MPR) in 1999, would bring significant governance reform and more progressive anti-corruption measures for the first time because two top leaders (Gus Dur and Megawati) were from the opposition in the New Order era. This paper attempts to evaluate the governance reform and anti-corruption measures in 1999–2001. This paper argues that there was a valuable opportunity to push for further governance reforms and a bolder anti-corruption drive, as there was a legitimate political top leadership stemming from the free-and-fair election in 1999 embodied in the appointment of Gus Dur and Megawati Soekarnoputri as president and vice president, respectively, by the Consultative People Assembly (MPR). However, the political bickering and blatant competition over state resources for the election campaign in 2004 underlying Indonesia’s former government led to a setback in several governance reform areas, including judicial reform.


2021 ◽  
pp. 019251212110351 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marina Larionova ◽  
Andrey Shelepov

The article reviews cooperation between the BRICS countries (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa) and their collective efforts to promote reform of international financial institutions, shape global financial regulation and improve financial cooperation. The authors focus on the BRICS–G20 engagement for global economic governance reform. To assess the progress so far, the study employs original quantitative data on the BRICS and G20 commitments and compliance, and qualitative analysis of the BRICS and G20 discourse and the transformation of the international economic architecture. The results suggest that, contrary to the common perception of the BRICS as a challenger of the traditional western-dominated international monetary and financial system, it acts in a cooperative manner, seeking to make the international financial architecture and global regulation more representative and responsive to emerging markets and developing economies needs, and strengthen the stability and resilience of international and domestic financial markets.


2018 ◽  
Vol 16 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Johan Erwin Isharyanto

<p>In the era of independence, guided democracy, the new order, until the era of<br />governance reform in Indonesia tended to override the importance of diversity.<br />Power consolidation tends to deny the existence of customary law community units<br />and is usually accompanied by etatism tendencies. This article describes how the<br />existence and regulation of customary law community units as subjects of<br />Constitutional Law. The conclusion obtained is that the existence and regulation of<br />customary law community units as subjects of constitutional law in the legal system<br />of the Republic of Indonesia constitution is guaranteed and recognized based on the<br />provisions of Article 28 B paragraph (2) article and 28 I paragraph (3) of the 1945<br />Constitution, as well as in Article 6 UU no. 39 of 1999 concerning human rights</p>


2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 147-168
Author(s):  
Artur Nowak-Far

While neither its institutional, nor legal arrangements fundamentally contributed to the emergence of the Eurozone crisis in the late 10’s of the 21st Century, the crisis exposed significant weaknesses of the EU economic governance, especially its inability to achieve a sustainable level of budgetary discipline. The crisis in particular highlighted the existing divisions of the EU Member States into different integration groups having divergent interests. Notably, it sharpened the division between the Eurozone states and non-Eurozone ones, as well as between the creditor-countries and debtor-countries. The EMU reform agenda adopted after 2008 gave more weighting to the interests of the former states. The emerging post-2008 economic governance-reform arrangements also gave more weight to the ECOFIN Council, at an expense of the European Commission. In the resulting institutional setting, the main aim of the EMU reform agenda was to assure the stability of the Eurozone and to reinforce its resistance to economic shocks. In this context, however, benefits arising from the reformed EMU are unevenly distributed, as they are more likely to avail the Eurozone countries than non- Eurozone countries, and more the creditor countries than the debtor ones.


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