Subtopic Deep Dive
Counter-Radicalisation Strategies in Indonesia
Research Guide
What is Counter-Radicalisation Strategies in Indonesia?
Counter-Radicalisation Strategies in Indonesia encompass community-based, educational, and rehabilitative programs by organizations like Nahdlatul Ulama and Muhammadiyah to prevent and reverse radicalization in Indonesian Muslim contexts.
Researchers evaluate longitudinal efficacy of moderate Islamic education initiatives and government-backed deradicalization efforts. Over 20 papers since 2006 analyze these strategies, with key works citing 100+ times (Mujiburrahman, 2006; Machmudi, 2008). Focus includes roles of madrasas and higher education in fostering tolerance.
Why It Matters
Indonesia's strategies provide scalable models for global counter-extremism, as seen in educational programs reducing radical recruitment (Davies, 2018; Susilo and Dalimunthe, 2019). Nahdlatul Ulama's community approaches counter Jemaah Islamiyah influence, informing policies in Southeast Asia (Muzakki, 2014). These efforts mitigate violence risks, with madrasa teachers pivotal in prevention (Supriadi et al., 2021).
Key Research Challenges
Measuring Program Efficacy
Longitudinal studies struggle to isolate counter-radicalisation impacts from broader social factors. Davies (2018) reviews international initiatives, noting inconsistent metrics for success. Indonesian contexts add complexity due to diverse Islamic organizations (Afwadzi and Miski, 2021).
Scalability Across Regions
Strategies effective in Java face adaptation issues in outer islands with varying radical group presence. Muzakki (2014) details Jama’ah Islamiyah strategies, highlighting uneven reach. Susilo and Dalimunthe (2019) identify challenges in expanding moderate education nationally.
Balancing Moderation and Politics
Government promotion of 'Moderate Islam' risks politicization, alienating communities. Umar (2016) traces foreign policy discourses on moderation. Barton et al. (2021) examine far-right Islamist populism's rise and fall, complicating neutral implementation.
Essential Papers
Feeling Threatened : Muslim-Christian Relations in Indonesia's New Order
Mujiburrahman Mujiburrahman · 2006 · Amsterdam University Press eBooks · 119 citations
Muslim-Christian relations were an important element of the social and political dynamics of Indonesia and an ever-sensitive subject of government policy during the New Order period (1966-1998). Te...
Islamising Indonesia: The Rise of Jemaah Tarbiyah and the Prosperous Justice Party (PKS)
Yon Machmudi · 2008 · ANU Press eBooks · 102 citations
The Prosperous Justice Party (PKS) is the most interesting phenomenon in contemporary Indonesian politics. Not only is it growing rapidly in membership and electoral support, it is also bringing a ...
A Genealogy of Moderate Islam: Governmentality and Discourses of Islam in Indonesia’s Foreign Policy
Ahmad Rizky Mardhatillah Umar · 2016 · STUDIA ISLAMIKA · 61 citations
This article analyses the political construction of ‘Moderate Islam Discourse’ in contemporary Indonesian Foreign Policy. Since 2004, the Indonesian Ministry of Foreign Affairs has campaigned for ‘...
Religious and Pro-Violence Populism in Indonesia: The Rise and Fall of a Far-Right Islamist Civilisationist Movement
Greg Barton, İhsan Yılmaz, Nicholas Morieson · 2021 · Religions · 51 citations
The first quarter of the twenty-first century has witnessed the rise of populism around the world. While it is widespread it manifests in its own unique ways in each society, nation, and region. Re...
THE ROOTS, STRATEGIES, AND POPULAR PERCEPTION OF ISLAMIC RADICALISM IN INDONESIA
Akh Muzakki · 2014 · JOURNAL OF INDONESIAN ISLAM · 40 citations
This paper examines Islamic radicalism particularly in Indonesia in terms of its roots and strategies of action. While focusing on the Jama’ah Islamiyah (JI, lit. “Islamic Community”) as the larger...
Review of educational initiatives in counter-extremism internationally: What works?
Lynn Davies · 2018 · Gothenburg University Publications Electronic Archive (Gothenburg University) · 40 citations
RELIGIOUS MODERATION IN INDONESIAN HIGHER EDUCATIONS: Literature Review
Benny Afwadzi, Miski Miski · 2021 · ULUL ALBAB Jurnal Studi Islam · 38 citations
This article is an attempt to review various studies on religious moderation or moderate Islam among students in the higher educations in Indonesia. It is written as prompted by the incompleteness ...
Reading Guide
Foundational Papers
Start with Mujiburrahman (2006, 119 citations) for New Order context of Muslim-Christian tensions; Machmudi (2008, 102 citations) on PKS rise; Muzakki (2014, 40 citations) on radicalism roots and strategies.
Recent Advances
Study Barton et al. (2021, 51 citations) on Islamist populism; Afwadzi and Miski (2021, 38 citations) on higher education moderation; Supriadi et al. (2021, 26 citations) on madrasa teachers.
Core Methods
Core methods: longitudinal program evaluations, discourse analysis of 'Moderate Islam,' surveys on radical perceptions, comparative studies with Malaysia (Umar, 2016; Ufen, 2009; Davies, 2018).
How PapersFlow Helps You Research Counter-Radicalisation Strategies in Indonesia
Discover & Search
Research Agent uses searchPapers and citationGraph to map 20+ papers from Mujiburrahman (2006, 119 citations) to recent works like Barton et al. (2021), revealing clusters around Nahdlatul Ulama programs; exaSearch uncovers Indonesian-specific deradicalization reports, while findSimilarPapers expands from Muzakki (2014) on Jama’ah Islamiyah strategies.
Analyze & Verify
Analysis Agent applies readPaperContent to extract metrics from Supriadi et al. (2021) on madrasa roles, then verifyResponse with CoVe checks claims against Davies (2018); runPythonAnalysis processes citation networks via pandas for efficacy trends, with GRADE grading evidence strength on longitudinal studies.
Synthesize & Write
Synthesis Agent detects gaps in scalability research between Umar (2016) and Susilo (2019), flagging contradictions in political Islam mobilization (Ufen, 2009); Writing Agent uses latexEditText, latexSyncCitations for reports, latexCompile for manuscripts, and exportMermaid for strategy flowcharts.
Use Cases
"Analyze citation trends in Indonesian madrasa deradicalization papers using Python."
Research Agent → searchPapers('madrasa radicalism Indonesia') → Analysis Agent → runPythonAnalysis(pandas on citations from Supriadi et al. 2021) → matplotlib trend plot exported as image.
"Draft LaTeX section comparing Nahdlatul Ulama and PKS counter-radicalisation."
Synthesis Agent → gap detection (Machmudi 2008 vs. Muzakki 2014) → Writing Agent → latexEditText(draft) → latexSyncCitations → latexCompile(PDF with figures).
"Find GitHub repos with code for radicalism survey analysis from Indonesian papers."
Research Agent → paperExtractUrls('radicalism Indonesia') → Code Discovery → paperFindGithubRepo → githubRepoInspect → exportCsv of survey datasets.
Automated Workflows
Deep Research workflow conducts systematic review of 50+ papers on counter-radicalisation, chaining searchPapers → citationGraph → structured report with GRADE scores. DeepScan applies 7-step analysis to Afwadzi (2021), verifying moderation metrics via CoVe checkpoints. Theorizer generates hypotheses on madrasa scalability from Supriadi et al. (2021) and Davies (2018).
Frequently Asked Questions
What defines counter-radicalisation strategies in Indonesia?
These strategies include educational programs in madrasas and community efforts by Nahdlatul Ulama and Muhammadiyah to prevent radicalization (Supriadi et al., 2021; Susilo and Dalimunthe, 2019).
What methods are used in these strategies?
Methods feature moderate Islamic education, teacher training against radicalism, and government 'Moderate Islam' discourses (Afwadzi and Miski, 2021; Umar, 2016).
What are key papers on this topic?
Foundational works: Mujiburrahman (2006, 119 citations) on Muslim-Christian relations; Machmudi (2008, 102 citations) on PKS; recent: Barton et al. (2021, 51 citations) on pro-violence populism.
What open problems remain?
Challenges include efficacy measurement, regional scalability, and avoiding politicization of moderation efforts (Davies, 2018; Barton et al., 2021).
Research Islamic Studies and Radicalism with AI
PapersFlow provides specialized AI tools for Social Sciences researchers. Here are the most relevant for this topic:
Systematic Review
AI-powered evidence synthesis with documented search strategies
AI Literature Review
Automate paper discovery and synthesis across 474M+ papers
Deep Research Reports
Multi-source evidence synthesis with counter-evidence
Find Disagreement
Discover conflicting findings and counter-evidence
See how researchers in Social Sciences use PapersFlow
Field-specific workflows, example queries, and use cases.
Start Researching Counter-Radicalisation Strategies in Indonesia with AI
Search 474M+ papers, run AI-powered literature reviews, and write with integrated citations — all in one workspace.
See how PapersFlow works for Social Sciences researchers
Part of the Islamic Studies and Radicalism Research Guide