01428 2200265 4500001002100000005001700021008004100038020002200079035002400101040001300125041000800138082001500146100002900161245011300190260003500303300001300338520065800351521001101009650005201020650003501072650002001107659000901127852001301136990001301149JAKPU-1211000000008620111225184919.0 ind  a978-87-91114-92-2 0010-121100000000084 aJKPU DKI0 aENG1 a322.109598 aPerwita, Anak Agung Bany1 aIndonesia and the Muslim world :bbetween Islam and secularism in the foreign policy of Soeharto and beyond. aCopenhagen:bNIAS Press,c2007 a238 hlm.3 a‘Why bother to write a study on Islam in Indonesia’s foreign policy’, asked a friend of mine, ‘when there is nothing much to write?’ My response to that precarious question is that, although at first glance there would seem to be nothing to much to write, the ‘revival’ of Islam in Indonesia’s domestic politics as well as in world politics in the late 1980s has marked the repositioning of religious factors in international relations. Moreover, the topic did not invite wider attention by foreign policy scholars, especially Indonesians. In addition, this topic has also become one of the ‘political mysteries’ of the Soeharto era.1 aDewasa aIndonesia - Politics and government - 1966-1998 aIslam and politics - Indonesia aSoeharto, 1921- aBeli aBPAD DKI a50383/11