This book demonstrates how preserving ideology and relationships with other activists affords social movements to persist over time amid limited resources and political opportunities in Southeast Asia.
Examining two peace movements in Indonesia – the largest democratic country in Southeast Asia – to illuminate discontinuity, continuity, and change in social movements, the author uses a cultural approach to understanding why social movements persist. He argues that the activists’ memory, relationship with others, collective identity, and emotion are reasons for social movements to ascend and peak. This is a direct response to the argument that the availability of resources and political opportunities is the main ingredient for any social movements to rise. While having different fates, the two movements studied arose in the midst of violence between Christian and Muslim communities in Ambon, Indonesia: The Kopi Badati movement and Filterinfo. The book extends the applicability of the cultural approach in explaining why social movements discontinue, continue, and change over time, without discounting the importance of available resources and political opportunities.
Addressing a gap in the existing social movement studies, the book explains why a social movement disbands and why the other manages to continue and change after achieving its immediate goal. It will be of interest to academics in the fields of Asian studies, (new)-media and communications, civil society, and international development.
Author(s): Abdul Rohman
Series: Routledge Contemporary Southeast Asia Series
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2022
Language: English
Pages: 168
City: London
Cover
Half Title
Series Page
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Contents
Table
1. Introduction
Notes
References
2. The life of social movements
Notes
References
3. Ambon in episodes of violence and peace
Peace movements during violent episodes
Movements in post-violent Ambon
Notes
References
4. Badati: what lead a movement to discontinue
The peak episode of the Badati movement
When money killed camaraderie
A dreadful feeling of being unacknowledged
Polarized worldviews
5. The rise of Filterinfo
Misinformation spread fast
Fear of the other was loud. Times were volatile
Mass media inaccurate reports
Notes
References
6. The peak of Filterinfo
Note
7. The ebb and dormancy of Filterinfo
The dormancy
8. The rise of new community groups
The roles of formal community leaders
The affective role of informal leaders
A continuous collective identity
9. Filterinfo as repository and memory
The memories
Preserving movement memories
New media platforms for preserving movement memories
The social triggers
10. Friction, competition, and reconciliation
Friction reconciliation: the role of common grounds and leaders
11. Social movements in post-conflict Ambon
Ramadan Berbagi
Save Aru
Ema Movement
TrotoArt
Social movement infrastructures
Repair, maintenance, and scale-up
Notes
12. Conclusion
Index