Authoritarian
The modern nations of Southeast Asia are in many cases artificial post-colonial constructions. This is most certainly true in the case of Indonesia, and although less so in the Philippines, the occupation and rule over the archipelagos led to the imposition of unity from the outside. External sources of authority including both European and Japanese occupations, had ill-prepared either Indonesia or the Philippines for anything remotely resembling democracy. Both nations, exposed to Western political philosophy and social ideals, did attempt to install and maintain democratic institutions but they have not become entrenched enough to ensure political, economic, and social empowerment of the mainly poor and uneducated rural populations in both of these Southeast Asian nations. While it may be dangerous to overgeneralize about the related and practically concurrent rise of authoritarian rule in the Philippines and Indonesia, even a cursory analysis shows that from the vestiges of colonialism rose autocracy. Authoritarian rule was a logical extension of external oppression and artificially imposed concepts of nationhood.
Colonialism had undermined the traditional social, political, and economic structures of traditional cultures in both Indonesia and the Philippines. In Indonesia and the Philippines both, successive colonial regimes tore apart the sinews and connective tissues that bound together village life. Village political structures throughout these two archipelagos was far from democratic, to be fair. Big man authorities, patriarchal rule, vestigial dynasties,...
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