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Total Diplomacy, Soft Power, and the “Islamic Turn” in Indonesia’s Foreign Policy Total Diplomacy, Soft Power, and the “Islamic Turn” in Indonesia’s Foreign Policy
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International Summit of Moderate Islamic Leaders (ISOMIL) International Summit of Moderate Islamic Leaders (ISOMIL)
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Islam Nusantara: Global Solution or Theological Problem? Islam Nusantara: Global Solution or Theological Problem?
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Twitter Diplomacy: Saudi Critiques of NU and Islam Nusantara Twitter Diplomacy: Saudi Critiques of NU and Islam Nusantara
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Notes Notes
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References References
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9 Saints, Scholars, and Diplomats: Religious Statecraft and the Problem of “Moderate Islam” in Indonesia
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Published:December 2021
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Abstract
This chapter explains Indonesia's public diplomacy efforts that link global positioning abroad with local religious statecraft. Indonesia has undergone an “Islamic turn” in its foreign policy agenda over the last couple of decades. Additionally, Indonesian leaders have tried to brand the country as the home of “moderate Islam.” However, the Islamic turn of foreign policy has refigured long-standing domestic concerns about political Islam and ideological and theological fault lines between Indonesian traditionalists and their Wahhabi detractors at home and in other countries such as Saudi Arabia. Indonesia's revamped image of “moderate Islam” plays better with Western governments worried about terror than those leaders in the Middle East.
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