Pancasila is the five principles enshrined in the constitution that form the ideological basis of the Indonesian state: belief in God; nationalism; humanitarianism; social justice; democracy.
2.
HosenNadirsyah, ‘Religion and the Indonesian Constitution: A Recent Debate’ (2005) (36)3Journal of Southeast Asian Studies419–440.
3.
BowenJohn, Islam, law, and equality in Indonesia: An anthropology of public reasoning (2003); Hosen, above n 2; Van BruinessenMartin, ‘Post-Suharto Muslim Engagements with Civil Society and Democratisation’ (Paper presented at the Third International Conference and Workshop ‘Indonesia in Transition’, Universitas Indonesia, Depok, 24–28 August 2003).
4.
ChandrakiknaKamala and YuniyantiChuzaifah, ‘The Battle over a “New” Indonesia: Religious Extremism, Democratisation and Women's Agency in a Plural Society’ (2004) (1)2ICIP Journal1–26.
5.
HasniatiCut, ‘Syariat Islam di Aceh: Simbol atau Substansi’, Artikel Perempuan <www.jurnalperempuan.com/yjp.jpo/?act=artikel%7C-54%7CX> at 12 June 2008; KamaruzzamanSuraiya, ‘Women and Syariat in Aceh’ (2004) Inside Indonesia79.
6.
QuinnGeorge, ‘Coming Apart and Staying Together at the Centre: Debates over Provincial Status in Java and Madura’ in AspinallEdward and FealyGreg (eds), Local Power and Politics in Indonesia: Decentralisation & Democratisation (2003); Rahima, ‘Perempuan dalam Arus Formalisasi Syariat Islam (Sebuah Pengantar)’ (Paper presented at Perempuan dalam Arus Formalisasi Syariat Islam: Belajar dari Tasikmalaya, Garut, Cianjur dan Banten, Jakarta <##>2004); SatriyoHana, ‘Decentralisation and Women in Indonesia: One Step Back, Two Steps Forward?’ in AspinallEdward and FealyGreg (eds) Local Power and Politics in Indonesia.
7.
Rahima, ‘Perempuan dalam Arus Formalisasi Syariat Islam (Sebuah Pengantar)’ (Paper presented at the Perempuan dalam Arus Formalisasi Syariat Islam: Belajar dari Tasikmalaya, Garut, Cianjur dan Banten, Jakarta <##>2004); MillerMichelle Ann, ‘The Nanggroe Aceh Darussalam Law: A Serious Response to Acehnese Separatism’ (2004) (5)3Asian Ethnicity335–51.
8.
McGibbonRodd, ‘Indonesian Politics in 2006: Stability, Compromise and Shifting Contests Over Ideology’ (2006) (42)3Bulletin of Indonesian Economic Studies321–40.
9.
Ibid334
10.
Ibid
11.
McLeodRoss and MacIntyreAndrew (eds), Indonesia: Democracy and the Promise of Good Government (2007).
12.
The Muslim veil has become a more politicised religious symbol in post-Suharto Indonesia. On university campuses, women feel more pressure to wear the jilbab than before. Islamic universities have also begun regulating Muslim dress on campus and enforcing veiling for all students regardless of religious persuasion. WarburtonEve, ‘No Longer a Choice’ (2007) Inside Indonesia89; WarburtonEve, Private Choice or Public Obligation: Institutional and Social Regimes of Veiling in Contemporary Indonesia (2006) University of Sydney Honours Thesis.