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Minding the mob: Vigilantism and impunity in democratic Indonesia

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Seminar Room 3 (HB3), Hedley Bull Building
acton, australia
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ANU Southeast Asia Institute
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Tue, 5 Nov, 3pm - 4:30pm AEDT

Event description

Minding the mob: Vigilantism and impunity in democratic Indonesia


Scholarship on collective violence mostly focuses on explaining those conflicts where political battle lines are clearly drawn, such as ethnic riots, electoral clashes, terrorism and civil wars. Increasingly, however, developing democracies are confronted with the surge of a more quotidian form of violence: vigilante attacks against suspected thieves, blasphemers, sexual deviants and a host of other offenders. Long understood as the public’s reaction to inadequate provision of order by the state, two contemporary features of vigilantism warrant a new explanation. First, the use of mob violence to punish a widening scope of offenses is increasingly observed in states that have undergone rapid state-building in recent years. Second, vigilantism has evolved from society’s way of occasionally bypassing the state into a form of violent lobbying that seeks to reform it.

This talk examines the rise of vigilante violence in Indonesia alongside a rapid expansion of the national police force. Drawing on extensive qualitative and quantitative evidence from Indonesia, I show how vigilantes develop collusive relationships with street-level bureaucrats to obtain impunity. I argue that vigilantism across the developing world is flourishing not because the state is absent but because its growing presence can be leveraged by vigilantes to protect them from the risks of engaging in mob violence.

About the Speaker: 

Sana Jaffrey is a Research Fellow at the Australian National University’s Department of Political and Social Change, and a nonresident scholar at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, Washington DC. She previously led the implementation of the National Violence Monitoring System (NVMS) data project at the World Bank, Jakarta (2008-2013) and served as the director of the Institute for Policy Analysis of Conflict (IPAC), Jakarta (2021-2022). Her research on violent conflict and the challenges of state-building in Asia has been published in Comparative Politics, Studies in Comparative International Development and Journal of East Asian Studies. She has a PhD in political science from the University of Chicago. Her dissertation on vigilantism in Indonesia was awarded the 2020 prize for best dissertation fieldwork by the American Political Science Association.


Image credit 
'Evidence' of motorcycle theft found on lynching victim, Banten, Indonesia. Sept 2017 by Sana Jaffrey


Light refreshments after the seminar for in-person attendees. 

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The ANU Southeast Asia Institute Research Seminar Series is a recurring seminar series that showcases the work of scholars within the ANU working on political, social and cultural issues in Southeast Asia, with the goal of encouraging greater exchange, collaboration and networking amongst the research community.

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Seminar Room 3 (HB3), Hedley Bull Building
acton, australia