Affiliation:
1. University of Lethbridge jan.newberry@uleth.ca
Abstract
Early childhood education and care programs in Indonesia developed
rapidly in the aftermath of the 2006 earthquake centered south of Yogyakarta. The
newly empowered self-directed learner at the center of these programs seemed
to follow from the emergence of another child in this devastated landscape: the
traumatized child in need of healing. The appearance of these images of childhood
along with Indonesia’s neoliberal democratization reiterates the long-standing
relationship between childhood and rule. Grounded in long-term ethnographic
work in the Yogyakarta area, this article traces a conceptual link between the shift
to transparent and accountable good governance in post-Suharto Indonesia and
the desire to produce a newly transparent childhood ready for intervention. The
generative power of history, trauma, and the interior self is contrasted with risk
management, nongovernmental governance, and the exteriorization of self and
state to challenge the unquestioned good of empowerment and transparency.
Cited by
4 articles.
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