Abstract Contemporary political dynasties pose unprecedented challenges to democratic governance by developing sophisticated mechanisms that manipulate institutions while preserving electoral legitimacy. This study examines Indonesia's Jokowi era (2014–2024), where systematic content analysis of 847 media articles and elite interviews reveal "adaptive dynastic politics"—a distinct phenomenon transcending traditional patronage through contextual legitimacy construction, institutional hybridization, digital coordination, and strategic coalition management. The analysis documents Indonesia's democratic deterioration from 57/100 to 56/100 (Freedom House) through systematic dynastic consolidation. Constitutional engineering enabled family succession despite age requirements, while coordinated pressure achieved 81% parliamentary control and comprehensive digital operations commanded 90-billion-rupiah government resources. While these mechanisms proved highly effective, our findings also record significant counterbalancing forces from civil society, independent media, and judicial factions whose resistance—though largely unsuccessful—reveals the contested nature of this erosion. Process tracing establishes clear causal pathways connecting these adaptive mechanisms to measurable decline across democratic institutions, political competition, civil liberties, and electoral integrity. Adaptive dynastic politics differs fundamentally from democratic backsliding by strengthening rather than destroying beneficial institutions while systematically weakening threatening ones. The paper concludes by examining mechanism durability into the Prabowo-Gibran era, suggesting they have become structurally embedded and are being repurposed for new political ends, offering essential insights for understanding institutional manipulation across developing democracies worldwide.
Widiyahseno et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
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