Download as docx, pdf, or txt
Download as docx, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 5

Daftar Pustaka

Alfirdaus, L. K., Hiariej, E., & Risakotta, F. A. (2014). Politik relasi etnik: matrilinealitas dan
etnik minoritas cina di padang, sumatra barat. KOMUNITAS: International Journal of
Indonesian Society and Culture, 6(1), 136-150.
Aspinall, E. (2015). Oligarchic populism: Prabowo Subianto's challenge to Indonesian
democracy. Indonesia, (99), 1-28.
Baudrillard, J. (1998). Société de consommation: Ses mythes, ses structures (Vol. 53). Sage.
Baudrillard, J. (2019). For a Critique of the Political Economy of the Sign. Verso Books.
Cohen, S. (2011). Whose side were we on? The undeclared politics of moral panic theory. Crime,
media, culture, 7(3), 237-243.
Dick, H. W. (1985). The rise of a middle class and the changing concept of equity in Indonesia:
An interpretation. Indonesia, (39), 71-92.
Fanany, R., & Fanany, I. (2019). The Elderly Must Endure. In The Elderly Must Endure. ISEAS
Publishing.
Fauzia, A. (2013). Faith and the state: A history of Islamic philanthropy in Indonesia (Vol. 1).
Brill.
Garadian, E. A. (2017). Membaca Populisme Islam Model Baru. Studia Islamika, 24(2), 379-93.
Grandinetti, T. (2015). The Palestinian middle class in Rawabi: Depoliticizing the
occupation. Alternatives, 40(1), 63-78.
Hadiz, V. R. (2014). The Organizational Vehicles of Islamic Political Dissent: Social Bases,
Genealogies and Strategies. Between Dissent and Power: The Transformation of Islamic
Politics in the Middle East and Asia, 42-65.
Hadiz, V. R. (2015). Capitalism, primitive accumulation and the 1960s' massacres: revisiting the
New Order and its violent genesis. Inter-Asia Cultural Studies, 16(2), 306-315.
Hadiz, V. R. (2018). Imagine all the people? Mobilising Islamic populism for right-wing politics
in Indonesia. Journal of Contemporary Asia, 48(4), 566-583.
Hadiz, V. R. (2019). The ‘floating’ummah in the fall of ‘Ahok’in Indonesia. TRaNS: Trans-
Regional and-National Studies of Southeast Asia, 7(2), 271-290.
Hadiz, V. R., & Robison, R. (2017). Competing populisms in post-authoritarian
Indonesia. International Political Science Review, 38(4), 488-502.
Hamayotsu, K. (2011). The end of political Islam? A comparative analysis of religious parties in
the Muslim democracy of Indonesia. Journal of Current Southeast Asian Affairs, 30(3),
133-159.
Hamayotsu, K. (2013). The limits of civil society in democratic Indonesia: media freedom and
religious intolerance. Journal of Contemporary Asia, 43(4), 658-677.
Hanandini, D. (1996). Perubahan Fungsi dan Makna Mamak Dalam Sistem Matrilineal
Masyarakat Minangkabau Perantauan di Kota Madya Surabaya (Doctoral dissertation,
Universitas Airlangga).
Hasan, Z. (2014). Risk sharing versus risk transfer in islamic finance.
Hofferth, S. L., & Iceland, J. (1998). Social capital in rural and urban communities 1. Rural
sociology, 63(4), 574-598.
Iman, D. T., & Mani, A. (2013). Motivations for migration among Minangkabau women in
Indonesia. Ritsumeikan Journal of Asia Pacific Studies, 32, 114-123.
Jati, W. R. (2013). Kearifan lokal sebagai resolusi konflik keagamaan. Walisongo: Jurnal
Penelitian Sosial Keagamaan, 21(2), 393-416.
Jati, W. R. (2016). Memaknai Kelas Menengah Muslim Sebagai Agen Perubahan Sosial Politik
Indonesia. Al-Tahrir: Jurnal Pemikiran Islam, 16(1), 133-151.
Jati, W. R. (2016). Membangun partisipasi politik kelas menengah Muslim Indonesia. Epistemé:
Jurnal Pengembangan Ilmu Keislaman, 11(2), 375-402.
Jylhä, K. M., & Hellmer, K. (2020). Right‐wing populism and climate change denial: The roles
of exclusionary and anti‐egalitarian preferences, conservative ideology, and
antiestablishment attitudes. Analyses of Social Issues and Public Policy, 20(1), 315-335.
Kahin, A. (1999). Rebellion to integration: West Sumatra and the Indonesian polity, 1926-1998.
Amsterdam University Press.
Kato, T. (1978). Change and continuity in the Minangkabau matrilineal system. Indonesia, (25),
1-16.
Kitley, P. (2008). Playboy Indonesia and the media: commerce and the Islamic public sphere on
trial in Indonesia. South East Asia Research, 16(1), 85-116.
Kreager, P., & Schröder-Butterfill, E. (2009). Ageing and Gender Preferences in Rural
Indonesia. Centre for Research on Ageing, School of Social Science, University of
Southampton.
Kusaka, W. (2017). Moral politics in the Philippines: Inequality, democracy and the urban poor.
NUS Press.
Listiorini, D., Asteria, D., & Sarwono, B. (2019). Moral panics on lgbt issues: evidence from
indonesian tv programme. Jurnal Studi Komunikasi, 3(3), 355-371.
Mamonova, N., & Franquesa, J. (2020). Populism, neoliberalism and agrarian movements in
Europe. Understanding rural support for right‐wing politics and looking for progressive
solutions. Sociologia Ruralis, 60(4), 710-731.
Mamonova, N., & Franquesa, J. (2020). Populism, neoliberalism and agrarian movements in
Europe. Understanding rural support for right‐wing politics and looking for progressive
solutions. Sociologia Ruralis, 60(4), 710-731.
Margiansyah, D. (2019). Populisme di Indonesia Kontemporer: Transformasi Persaingan
Populisme dan Konsekuensinya dalam Dinamika Kontestasi Politik Menjelang Pemilu
2019. Jurnal Penelitian Politik, 16(1), 47-68.
Marzouki, N., McDonnell, D., & Roy, O. (2016). Saving the people: How populists hijack
religion. Oxford University Press.
Mietzner, M. (2018). Fighting illiberalism with illiberalism: Islamist populism and democratic
deconsolidation in Indonesia. Pacific Affairs, 91(2), 261-282.
Mietzner, M. (2020). Rival populisms and the democratic crisis in Indonesia: Chauvinists,
Islamists and technocrats. Australian Journal of International Affairs, 74(4), 420-438.
Mietzner, M., & Muhtadi, B. (2018). Explaining the 2016 Islamist mobilisation in Indonesia:
Religious intolerance, militant groups and the politics of accommodation. Asian Studies
Review, 42(3), 479-497.
Mudde, C. (2004). The populist zeitgeist. Government and opposition, 39(4), 541-563.
Naim, M. (1984). Merantau pola migrasi suku Minangkabau.
Nilan, P., & Wibowanto, G. R. (2021). Challenging Islamist Populism in Indonesia through
Catholic Youth Activism. Religions, 12(6), 395.
Oki, A. (1977). Social change in the West Sumatran village: 1908-1945. The Australian National
University (Australia).
Oztas, B. (2020). Islamic populism: Promises and limitations. Islamic Populism: Promises and
Limitations, 6(1), 103-129.
Parker, L. (2009). Religion, class and schooled sexuality among Minangkabau teenage
girls. Bijdragen tot de taal-, land-en volkenkunde/Journal of the Humanities and Social
Sciences of Southeast Asia, 165(1), 62-94.
Parker, L. (2014). The moral panic about the socializing of young people in
Minangkabau. Wacana, 15(1), 19-40.
Pepinsky, T. B., Liddle, R. W., & Mujani, S. (2009). Testing Political Islam’s Economic
Advantage: The Case of Indonesia. In American Political Science Association Annual
Meeting September (pp. 3-6).
Pepinsky, T. B., Liddle, R. W., & Mujani, S. (2012). Testing Islam's political advantage:
Evidence from Indonesia. American Journal of Political Science, 56(3), 584-600.
Portes, A. (1998). Social capital: Its origins and applications in modern sociology. Annual review
of sociology, 24(1), 1-24.
Putnam, R. D. (1995). Tuning in, tuning out: The strange disappearance of social capital in
America. PS: Political science & politics, 28(4), 664-683.
Robinson, J. (2014). Introduction to a virtual issue on comparative urbanism. International
Journal of Urban and Regional Research.
Rofhani, R. (2013). Budaya Urban Muslim Kelas Menengah. Teosofi: Jurnal Tasawuf dan
Pemikiran Islam, 3(1), 181-210.
Sawada, Y., & Takasaki, Y. (2017). Natural disaster, poverty, and development: An
introduction. World Development, 94, 2-15.
Simon, G. M. (2007). Caged in on the outside: identity, morality, and self in an Indonesian
Islamic community. University of California, San Diego.
Simon, G. M. (2009). The soul freed of cares? Islamic prayer, subjectivity, and the contradictions
of moral selfhood in Minangkabau, Indonesia. American Ethnologist, 36(2), 258-275.
Simon, G. M. (2012). Conviction without being convinced: Maintaining Islamic certainty in
Minangkabau, Indonesia. Ethos, 40(3), 237-257.
Simon, G. M. (2014). Caged in on the outside: Moral subjectivity, selfhood, and Islam in
Minangkabau, Indonesia. University of Hawaii Press.
Susanti, E., Kusujiarti, S., Mas’udah, S., & Budirahayu, T. (2022). Survival Strategies of
Indonesian Women from Low-Income Families during the COVID-19 Pandemic. Journal
of International Women's Studies, 24(8), 12.
Tans, R. (2012). Mobilizing resources, building coalitions: Local power in Indonesia.
Unsworth, R. K., De Grave, S., Jompa, J., Smith, D. J., & Bell, J. J. (2007). Faunal relationships
with seagrass habitat structure: a case study using shrimp from the Indo-Pacific. Marine
and Freshwater Research, 58(11), 1008-1018.
van Bruinessen, M. M. (2011). What happened to the smiling face of Indonesian Islam? Muslim
intellectualism and the conservative turn in post-Suharto Indonesia. RSIS Working
Papers, No. 222.
van Klinken, G. (2014). Elite Brokers (1934–1950). In The Making of Middle Indonesia (pp.
103-125). Brill.
von Benda-Beckmann, K. (2007). Ambivalent identities: decentralization and minangkabau
political communities. In Renegotiating Boundaries (pp. 417-442). Brill.
von Benda-Beckmann, F., & von Benda-Beckmann, K. (2012). Identity in dispute: law, religion,
and identity in Minangkabau. Asian Ethnicity, 13(4), 341-358.
Wekke, I. S., & Cahaya, A. (2015). Fishermen poverty and survival strategy: research on poor
households in Bone Indonesia. Procedia economics and finance, 26, 7-11.
Winters, J. A. (2013). Oligarchy and democracy in Indonesia. Indonesia, (96), 11-33.
Wodak, R. (2015). Gender and language: Cultural concerns. International Encyclopedia of
Social & Behavioral Sciences, 698-703.
Yilmaz, I., Demir, M., & Morieson, N. (2021). Religion in Creating Populist Appeal: Islamist
Populism and Civilizationism in the Friday Sermons of Turkey’s
Diyanet. Religions, 12(5), 359.
Yusra, A. 1997. Tokoh yang Berhati Rakyat: Biografi Harun Zain, Jakarta: Gebu Minang.

You might also like