D. Zaenuddin, Yekti Maunati, I. Ardhana, Dicky Sofjan
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Research findings suggestthe following: (1) The imbalance of bonding and bridging social capital has tended to result in hegemonic relations among faith-inspired civil society that to some extent excludes equal participation of ‘the others’; (2) The social capital of civil society organizations is highly nuanced and formed based on differences in religious and political orientations, which are the resultant interpretation and understanding of the Sacred texts and its religious culture; (3) Nahdlatul Ulama, Muhammadiyah and Persatuan Tarbiyah Indonesia with moderate religious orientations (wasatiyah) have contributed positively to social capital that is persistent and consistent with democracy, while Hizbut Tahrir Indonesia (HTI) and Front Pembela Islam (FPI) and to a lesser extent Gereja Masehi Injili di Minahasa (GMIM) with religious fundamentalist outlook tend to have an imbalanced social capital, which is resistant toward the so-called “Pancasila democracy”.","PeriodicalId":31333,"journal":{"name":"Religio Jurnal Studi Agamaagama","volume":"19 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2022-09-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"A Social Capital In Contemporary Indonesia: Examining Faith-Inspired Civil Society and Democracy\",\"authors\":\"D. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
作为一项国家发展议程,印度尼西亚国家和社会都需要发展和深化民主,以实现一个公正和繁荣的国家。在这一框架内,受信仰启发的民间社会组织应促进法律面前的平等,并遵守人道、多元和宽容的宗教社会生活。本研究采用了布迪厄的“习惯”理论、盖尔纳的“社会组织类型学”理论和Kymlicka的“多元文化公民”理论。它还涉及了其他社会学理论,即Putnam, Coleman, Uphof的公民社区社会资本理论,以及Bolland, Menchik和Hassan的宗教-国家关系理论。本研究采用社会学、人类学、政治学和历史学等多学科方法进行定性研究。研究结果表明:(1)社会资本联结与桥接的失衡倾向于导致信仰激发型公民社会之间的霸权关系,在一定程度上排斥“他者”的平等参与;(2)民间社会组织的社会资本是高度微妙的,是基于宗教和政治取向的差异而形成的,这是对神圣文本及其宗教文化的解释和理解的结果;(3)具有温和宗教取向(wasatiyah)的Nahdlatul Ulama、Muhammadiyah和Persatuan Tarbiyah对持久且与民主一致的社会资本做出了积极贡献,而具有宗教原教旨主义观点的Hizbut Tahrir Indonesia (HTI)和Front Pembela Islam (FPI)以及Gereja Masehi Injili di Minahasa (GMIM)往往具有不平衡的社会资本,对所谓的“Pancasila民主”具有抵抗性。
A Social Capital In Contemporary Indonesia: Examining Faith-Inspired Civil Society and Democracy
As a national agenda for development, democracy needs to be developed and deepened by both the Indonesian state and society to achieve a just and prosperous country. Within this framework, faith-inspired civil society organizations are expected to promote equality before the law and observe humanistic, pluralistic and tolerant religious social life. This study employs the theory of Bourdieu’s Habitus, Gellner’s Typology of Social Organization and Kymlicka’s Multicultural Citizenship. It also engages other sociological theories, namely the social capital theory of civic community from Putnam, Coleman, Uphof, and religion-state relations theory from Bolland, Menchik, and Hassan. This study is qualitative with a multidisciplinary approach derived from Sociology, Anthropology, Political Science, and History. Research findings suggestthe following: (1) The imbalance of bonding and bridging social capital has tended to result in hegemonic relations among faith-inspired civil society that to some extent excludes equal participation of ‘the others’; (2) The social capital of civil society organizations is highly nuanced and formed based on differences in religious and political orientations, which are the resultant interpretation and understanding of the Sacred texts and its religious culture; (3) Nahdlatul Ulama, Muhammadiyah and Persatuan Tarbiyah Indonesia with moderate religious orientations (wasatiyah) have contributed positively to social capital that is persistent and consistent with democracy, while Hizbut Tahrir Indonesia (HTI) and Front Pembela Islam (FPI) and to a lesser extent Gereja Masehi Injili di Minahasa (GMIM) with religious fundamentalist outlook tend to have an imbalanced social capital, which is resistant toward the so-called “Pancasila democracy”.