Persistent URL of this record https://hdl.handle.net/1887/3134560
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Maintaining order: Public prosecutors in post-authoritarian countries, the case of Indonesia
This research is a socio-legal study of the criminal justice system. It contributes to a number of broader debates about post-authoritarian public prosecutors and their role in promoting the rule of law. By combining criminal law, criminology, political science and anthropological theory, it provides an important framework for the analysis and critique of conditions for, impacts of, and possibilities for prosecution services in post-authoritarian countries.
The case of Indonesia constitutes an example of the way in which prosecution services evolve in countries marked by authoritarian tendencies....Show moreThis study gives a comprehensive account of the public prosecutor’s role in post-authoritarian Indonesia, both in promoting the rule of law and in maintaining the political status quo. It traces the development of the Indonesian prosecution service, historically and politically, exploring what and who influences its performance, as well as how public prosecutors work in practice.
This research is a socio-legal study of the criminal justice system. It contributes to a number of broader debates about post-authoritarian public prosecutors and their role in promoting the rule of law. By combining criminal law, criminology, political science and anthropological theory, it provides an important framework for the analysis and critique of conditions for, impacts of, and possibilities for prosecution services in post-authoritarian countries.
The case of Indonesia constitutes an example of the way in which prosecution services evolve in countries marked by authoritarian tendencies. It shows how various regimes position public prosecutors as ‘justice postmen’, who deliver cases based on the government’s interests, as well as on the interests of other powerful actors, such as political parties, companies, or the police force. Such situations are commonly seen in authoritarian countries, where the executive dominates political power, and public prosecutors have become tools of the government in maintaining political order.
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- All authors
- Afandi, F.
- Supervisor
- Bedner, A.W.; Crijns, J.H.
- Committee
- Woude, M.A.H. van der, Berenschot, W.J.; Santoso, T.; Crouch, M.
- Qualification
- Doctor (dr.)
- Awarding Institution
- Institute of Criminal Law and Criminology, Faculty of Law, Leiden University
- Date
- 2021-01-21
- Title of host publication
- Meijers-reeks
Publication Series
- Name
- MI-362