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Awareness of the internet’s potential to facilitate mobilization around social causes has been widely recognized. Mobile devices are the medium of choice for the majority of Indonesians who wish to access the internet. With an estimated 64 million Facebook accounts, 20 million Twitter users, and 5 million active bloggers, the internet is transforming the social and political landscape in Indonesia.
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Internet access continues to expand, though infrastructural challenges remain, while affordable smartphones have helped embed digital communication in daily life. Vibrant civil society organizations continue to play a major role in democratization, and economic development has increased the middle class population. The 1998 transition paved the way for stronger protection of human rights, including freedom of expression, through constitutional and legal reform. Online campaigning was increasingly influential. Indonesia, the world’s third largest democracy, mobilized 187 million voters, including 67 million voting for the first time, and the close result lead to heated debates on social media. The third direct presidential election since the democratic transition in 1998 was highly polarizing. The legislative election in May 2014 was followed by the presidential election in July, but the transition was delayed by a failed challenge mounted in the Constitutional Court by the losing candidate. Joko Widodo, former governor of Jakarta and mayor of Solo, was inaugurated as Indonesia’s seventh president on October 20, 2014, ushering in a new administration.