By: Bangkit Rahmat Tri Widodo

National discipline constitutes a fundamental pillar for realizing social order, effective public governance, and a nation’s competitiveness in the global arena. In Indonesia, the concept of national discipline has undergone a dynamic historical trajectory, especially when viewed through the lens of political change and shifting governing regimes. During the New Order period, discipline was largely understood within a coercive framework in which citizens’ compliance was enforced through tight state control. State apparatuses—both civilian and military—played a dominant role in maintaining social order, thereby severely constraining civic freedoms. Such a pattern of discipline produced formalistic and artificial compliance that approximated authoritarian compliance rather than the internalization of collective awareness. A centralized developmentalist paradigm together with political repression formed the foundation of the disciplinary model in that era (Aspinall & Mietzner, 2010; Budiman, 1990).
The transition to democracy after 1998 ushered in radical change. The euphoria of freedom opened a broad space for political participation, freedom of expression, and social articulation. Yet these shifts simultaneously introduced serious challenges. Symptoms emerged of weakening social order, low legal compliance, and a decline in civic virtue, which, in fact, is central to democracy. Phenomena such as increasing traffic violations, the pervasiveness of petty corruption within the bureaucracy, poor work discipline among state officials, and diminishing respect for public norms indicate a deficit in the internalization of discipline at both individual and collective levels (Mietzner, 2012; Liddle & Mujani, 2007).
From a national development perspective, weak discipline has direct implications for the effectiveness of public policy. States with low levels of social discipline face elevated economic and political costs due to disorder, bureaucratic inefficiency, and societal resistance to legal rules. Conversely, the social capital literature underscores that societies exhibiting higher levels of public discipline tend to enjoy better governance quality, more stable economic growth, and more substantial democratic consolidation (Putnam, 1993; Fukuyama, 2000). This indicates that discipline is not merely about rule-following; it is a necessary condition for sustainable development and democratic legitimacy.
Indonesia’s core challenge lies in restructuring national disciplinary policy and systems so that they align with democratic principles. The task is to transform a model of discipline historically premised on external compulsion into one rooted in the collective awareness of citizens. Democratic discipline should be understood as the internalization of shared values and norms rather than as a mere instrument of state control. In this sense, discipline becomes a form of self-discipline arising from the conscious effort to balance individual freedoms with adherence to public rules that sustain the common good. This process demands a paradigmatic shift from obedience through coercion toward civic discipline through awareness (Etzioni, 1995; Diamond & Morlino, 2005).
Within this framework, the urgency of studying national discipline in Indonesia pertains not only to political stability but also to long-term development trajectories. Addressing these challenges requires a more robust conceptual articulation of democratic discipline; policy design that integrates a whole-of-government approach with active whole-of-society participation; and a long-term roadmap extending to 2060. In doing so, national discipline can be transformed into social and political capital that not only supports democratic consolidation but also propels Indonesia toward its vision of becoming an advanced nation amid intensifying global competition.
Theoretical and Conceptual Framework
Understandings of discipline in the social and political sciences are far from monolithic; they evolve in tandem with historical contexts, power structures, and normative paradigms. In the classical sociological tradition, Talcott Parsons (1951) conceives of discipline as part of the social control mechanisms that preserve order within a societal system. For Parsons, social order can be sustained only when individuals align their behavior with institutionalized norms and rules. Discipline thus functions as an integrative mechanism that secures social cohesion through the internalization of values and conformity to social roles.
In contrast, Michel Foucault (1977) foregrounds the darker side of discipline as an instrument of power that can be repressive. In Discipline and Punish, Foucault shows how discipline emerges as a “micro-physics of power” embedded within modern institutions such as schools, prisons, and military barracks. Through surveillance, behavioral regulation, and normalization, discipline operates as a technology of power that constrains individual freedom and systematically governs the bodies of those it affects. In this framing, discipline is not merely about order; it is a form of political control that can entrench state domination over citizens.
Within democratic contexts, these perspectives must be complemented by an approach that emphasizes civic virtue. Robert Putnam (1993), in his study of civic traditions in Italy, demonstrates that the quality of democracy is powerfully shaped by the level of social capital—trust, norms, and networks that enhance societal cooperation. Discipline here does not primarily arise from external compulsion; rather, it flows from values internalized by society as part of civic ethics. In a similar vein, Amitai Etzioni (1995) underscores communitarianism, advocating a balance between individual rights and collective responsibilities. For Etzioni, democratic discipline expresses internalized social responsibility, whereby citizens willingly limit their freedom to safeguard shared liberty and social order.
Regarding democratic consolidation, Wolfgang Merkel (2004) argues that consolidated democracy requires not only robust institutional frameworks but also both horizontal and vertical legitimacy. Horizontal legitimacy concerns societal acceptance of democratic rules and values, while vertical legitimacy relates to the consistency of state institutions in upholding law and implementing public policy. Without social discipline that sustains this dual legitimacy, democracy remains fragile and susceptible to dysfunctional practices. Larry Diamond and Leonardo Morlino (2005) add that democratic quality hinges on active citizen participation and governmental accountability. In this light, democratic discipline becomes a precondition for healthy participation, since the democratic arena can function optimally only when citizens are willing to comply with public norms.
To restructure a national disciplinary system democratically, an integrative approach is indispensable. A whole-of-government perspective provides a framework for ensuring coherence across ministries, agencies, and levels of government in building a culture of discipline. As Christensen and Lægreid (2007) note, such an approach emphasizes not only policy coordination but also implementation synergies to achieve consistent public governance. Yet institutional coherence alone is insufficient. Democratic discipline can endure only if complemented by a whole-of-society approach that foregrounds active engagement from civil society, the education sector, the media, and private actors. Ansell and Gash (2008) argue that collaborative governance is needed to integrate state and societal roles across policy formulation and implementation. In this way, national discipline becomes not merely a government instrument but a collectively forged agreement arising from broad-based participation across all elements of the nation.
Taken together, this theoretical and conceptual framework clarifies that discipline is not a singular concept. It can be understood as a social mechanism, an instrument of power, and an internalized civic value. In Indonesia’s democratic setting, the challenge is to elaborate discipline as a civic virtue that supports democratic consolidation while ensuring that its institutionalization proceeds through collaborative governance grounded in whole-of-government and whole-of-society logics.
National Discipline in the Indonesian Context
National discipline in Indonesia today faces complex challenges that manifest across social, political, and bureaucratic domains. In everyday life, low levels of public compliance with traffic regulations represent one of the most visible symptoms. Data from the National Police’s Traffic Corps indicate persistently high rates of traffic violations, ranging from not wearing helmets and disregarding lane markings to neglecting road safety regulations, all of which have contributed to rising accident rates and broader social costs (Setiawan, 2019). This phenomenon reflects a crisis of legal compliance at the individual level, which should, in fact, be the most basic indicator of public discipline.
Similar issues are evident within the bureaucracy. Corruption in its small-scale forms, or petty corruption, remains widespread, ranging from illegal levies in public service delivery to everyday practices of bribery and gratuity. Transparency International (2022) has assigned Indonesia a score of 34 out of 100 on its Corruption Perceptions Index, underscoring the persistence of corruption within lower- and mid-level bureaucracies. Such corruption undermines the effectiveness of governance and erodes public morality by fostering a permissive culture that tolerates rule-breaking. Furthermore, bureaucratic discipline often remains fragile. Low attendance among civil servants, a weak work ethic, and organizational cultures that are not fully merit-based indicate a deficit in institutional discipline (Dwiyanto, 2011).
Additionally, the lack of collective awareness in maintaining public spaces is another indicator of weak national discipline. Behaviors such as littering, damaging public facilities, and violating environmental regulations reveal a lack of civic responsibility toward shared goods. This demonstrates that discipline has not only failed to become institutionalized within state structures but has also not been effectively internalized within civil society.
The roots of this problem can be traced back to the authoritarian legacy of the New Order, in which discipline was equated with obedience to coercive authority. At that time, compliance was enforced through strict state surveillance, particularly by security apparatuses, so that discipline was viewed as obedience to hierarchical commands rather than civic discipline arising from citizen awareness (Aspinall & Mietzner, 2010). This produced a culture of formalistic compliance but failed to instill genuine internalization of discipline within society.
Following 1998, the democratic transition led to a surge in political freedom. Public spaces, previously tightly restricted, opened to accommodate broader political participation and social expression. Yet this freedom also produced a phenomenon of democratic disarray, in which social order weakened due to a lack of collective discipline. Freedom was often interpreted as unlimited liberty, generating a paradox between demands for individual rights and the necessity of maintaining social order (Mietzner, 2012; Heryanto & Hadiz, 2005).
Beyond structural and political factors, weak character education and civic education have also contributed fundamentally to this condition. The national curriculum has emphasized cognitive and academic aspects, while the cultivation of civic character and collective discipline has received insufficient attention. Lickona (1991) argues that character education is a primary instrument for building civic virtue, understood as citizens’ willingness to balance personal interests with social responsibilities. Without an educational system that embeds values of discipline from an early stage, society will struggle to foster discipline that arises from awareness rather than coercion.
These conditions underscore the need for a restructuring of the concept of national discipline in Indonesia. Without democratic discipline, it is difficult to imagine Indonesia achieving its vision of becoming an advanced nation by 2045, as outlined in the Golden Indonesia Vision. A country with weak social discipline will face higher development costs due to bureaucratic inefficiencies, legal non-compliance, and fragile social cohesion. Conversely, if discipline can be transformed into a democratically internalized collective awareness, it will function as social capital that strengthens governance, accelerates development, and secures democratic legitimacy. Thus, national discipline building can no longer be viewed as a supplementary agenda, but rather as an indispensable requirement for achieving inclusive and sustainable development in Indonesia.
Strategies for Structuring National Discipline Policy
Restructuring national discipline policy in Indonesia requires a comprehensive and multi-layered approach. Discipline is not a singular concept to be imposed top-down, but rather a system of values and social practices that must be harmonized with democratic principles. This strategy can be articulated across five interrelated dimensions: normative, educative, institutional, socio-cultural, and technological, all of which must be pursued simultaneously.
The normative dimension provides the foundation, as it pertains to the legal and regulatory frameworks underpinning the implementation of national discipline. Harmonizing regulations with democratic principles and human rights is essential so that discipline is not perceived as a tool of state repression, but rather as a mechanism to ensure fair and equitable social order. Constitutional law scholarship underscores that the legitimacy of rules depends not only on legislative processes but also on societal acceptance (Habermas, 1996). In the Indonesian context, this means that regulations concerning discipline—whether in the bureaucracy, education, or public spaces—must be situated within a democratic rule-of-law framework that safeguards individual freedoms while ensuring the common good (Asshiddiqie, 2005).
The educative dimension underscores the importance of strengthening civic and character education. Education serves as the primary arena for shaping awareness of discipline from an early age. Lickona (1991) contends that character education does not merely impart moral knowledge but also fosters habitual behaviors that embody social responsibility. In this regard, civic education in schools must be reinforced to cultivate civic virtue, which is the willingness of citizens to sacrifice part of their individual liberty for the collective well-being (Putnam, 1993). Through such measures, discipline can be transformed from coerced compliance into compliance that stems from moral and intellectual consciousness.
The institutional dimension pertains to bureaucratic governance and state institutions. A bureaucracy lacking in discipline cannot credibly instill discipline within society. Bureaucratic reform that emphasizes meritocracy, transparency, and consistent application of reward and punishment mechanisms is indispensable. Dwiyanto (2011) emphasizes that Indonesian bureaucracy remains prone to patrimonialism and patronage, thereby undermining institutional integrity. By consistently implementing a merit system and measurable performance evaluation, institutional discipline can be strengthened to set an example for society. State institutions such as the military, police, and civil service can thus function as role models in cultivating democratic discipline—firm, consistent, and accountable, but not authoritarian.
The socio-cultural dimension recognizes that discipline cannot be established solely through regulation and institutions; it must also be internalized in public life. Collective discipline must evolve into a cultural norm embedded in everyday practices, requiring active participation from communities, the media, and digital public spaces. Inglehart and Welzel (2005) explain that civic values in modern societies are shaped through ongoing social interactions across families, local communities, and mass media. In Indonesia, cultivating public discipline can be achieved by mobilizing civil society organizations as drivers of awareness campaigns while leveraging mainstream and social media to shape positive public opinion about the value of discipline in a democracy. Discipline would thus be viewed not as a compulsory obligation but as a source of collective pride.
The technological dimension has become increasingly significant in the digital era. Technology-based monitoring systems can provide practical tools for ensuring transparent and accountable enforcement of discipline. The rise of open government data since the 2010s highlights the importance of transparency in public information for enhancing accountability and civic participation (Janssen et al., 2012). Through digital systems, compliance can be monitored in real-time, enabling citizens to participate directly in oversight processes. For example, mobile applications for public reporting can empower citizens to document rule violations, while governments can employ big data analytics to detect systemic patterns of non-compliance. Such technological integration not only enhances state capacity in enforcing discipline but also ensures that citizens actively participate in maintaining accountability.
By combining normative, educative, institutional, socio-cultural, and technological dimensions, strategies for structuring national discipline policy can be directed toward building a democratic, sustainable, and adaptive disciplinary system. Robust discipline will not emerge from a single dimension alone but from the synergy of multiple, mutually reinforcing aspects. Only through such integration can discipline become the social and political capital necessary for supporting democratic consolidation and accelerating Indonesia’s achievement of its Golden Vision 2045.
Roadmap and Timeline for Implementation
2025–2030: Normative and Cultural Foundations
The initial stage of constructing a democratic national discipline in Indonesia from 2025 to 2030 must focus on establishing robust normative and cultural foundations. This period can be understood as the phase for preparing the legal framework, values, and cultural underpinnings that will support the long-term development of national discipline. Without a clear normative framework and the internalization of values at the societal level, any disciplinary policy risks relapsing into the coercive traps associated with authoritarian periods, thereby forfeiting its social and political legitimacy.
The first priority is to draft a National Discipline System Act. A dedicated regulation that positions discipline as an instrument of democratic development would provide an umbrella framework to ensure cross-sectoral policy consistency. From the perspective of democratic legal theory, Habermas (1996) argues that legal legitimacy can only be secured through a participatory deliberative process, whereby law is deemed valid not merely because it is produced by state institutions, but because it emerges from a public consensus. Consequently, the legislative process must involve not only the government and parliament but also civil society, academics, and professional associations so that the resulting statute genuinely reflects the nation’s collective aspirations. Comparative experience shows that inclusive legal design increases social compliance because citizens develop a moral attachment to rules that they have jointly endorsed (Tyler, 2006).
Beyond strengthening the normative framework, the cultural dimension is equally important. At this stage, integrating civic education across all levels of schooling must be a strategic priority. Civic education is not merely a vehicle for transferring knowledge about constitutions or citizens’ political rights; it is a means of cultivating civic virtue—habits of citizenship that balance individual freedom with collective responsibility (Diamond & Morlino, 2005). In his study of Italy, Putnam (1993) emphasizes that democratic institutional performance depends on the extent to which civic values are deeply embedded in society. By fortifying civic education from primary school through university, Indonesia can nurture a new generation that understands discipline not as an external obligation but as an intrinsic awareness necessary to sustain social order.
Integration of civic education must also be complemented by systematic character education. Thomas Lickona (1991) emphasizes that character education aims to form not only the mind but also the heart and behavior. In the context of national discipline, this implies that education should inculcate responsibility, integrity, and adherence to shared rules as part of civic identity. The curriculum should be oriented to connect individual disciplines, social order, and national progress. This aligns with Etzioni’s (1995) communitarianism, which posits that individual liberty must always be balanced by collective responsibility toward society.
In parallel with building the normative framework and strengthening education, the government should launch a national campaign that functions as a cultural instrument for cultivating shared awareness. A campaign themed “Democratic Discipline, Advancing Indonesia” can serve as a collective narrative to reinforce the nation’s social imagination. Political communication studies demonstrate that public campaigns influence the cognitive agenda by shaping how citizens perceive specific issues (McCombs & Shaw, 1972). Through such a campaign, discipline can be framed not merely as an obligation but as developmental capital that unites all elements of the nation. With the support of mass media, social media, civil society organizations, and local communities, the campaign can establish a new social norm in which discipline is perceived as a source of national pride rather than merely a set of rules to obey.
Taken together—the establishment of a legal framework through a National Discipline System Act, the strengthening of civic and character education at all educational levels, and the rollout of a national campaign to build collective awareness—these measures constitute the foundational phase of democratic national discipline building. Without these foundations, efforts to institutionalize discipline will remain fragile and prone to being perceived as merely coercive. With strong normative and cultural underpinnings, however, Indonesia has a significant opportunity to embed discipline as a living civic virtue within society and as a prerequisite for realizing the Golden Indonesia 2045 vision.
2030–2040: Institutionalization and Capacity Building
The decade from 2030 to 2040 can be understood as the institutionalization phase, during which previously established normative and cultural foundations are embedded more structurally into systems of government and societal governance. At this stage, strategies for structuring national discipline should move beyond legal scaffolding and basic awareness toward strengthening institutional capacities so that discipline becomes genuinely integrated into bureaucratic practice, political systems, and everyday social life.
A central priority in this phase is implementing a digital governance system designed to support disciplinary management among state personnel, including civil servants, the armed forces, and the police. Digital transformation in government is not merely a matter of technological modernization; it constitutes a new paradigm emphasizing transparency, accountability, and efficiency in public management (Margetts & Dunleavy, 2013). Through digital governance, various aspects of personnel discipline can be monitored in real-time via performance information systems, electronic attendance systems, and evaluation tools grounded in big data analytics. More broadly, technology enables the state to reduce discretionary power that often opens the door to abuse while closing space for indiscipline that has been difficult to control. Estonia’s experience as a pioneer in digital public administration demonstrates that integrated digital governance can effectively curb corruption and enhance service efficiency (Drechsler, 2018).
Beyond digital systems, institutionalization must also focus on establishing meritocracy in the recruitment and management of state personnel. For decades, Indonesia’s bureaucracy has been marked by patronage, nepotism, and the sale of positions—practices that degrade institutional quality and exacerbate workplace indiscipline (Dwiyanto, 2011). A meritocracy insists that recruitment, promotion, and placement be based on competence, performance, and integrity, rather than on political proximity or personal ties. Public administration theory regards the merit system as a core pillar of modern governance because only a professional bureaucracy free from patronage can deliver effective public services (Peters & Pierre, 2012). By consistently applying meritocratic principles, Indonesia not only builds bureaucratic discipline but also creates structural incentives for officials to work with integrity, strengthening the bureaucracy as a visible exemplar of democratic discipline for society at large.
Institutionalizing national discipline, however, cannot be left solely to the state. Civil society must be afforded greater space to monitor and reinforce a culture of social discipline. Civil society organizations (CSOs) play a vital balancing role; through watchdog mechanisms, they can ensure that discipline is not practiced repressively but remains aligned with democratic principles (Diamond, 1999). Ansell and Gash (2008) emphasize the importance of collaborative governance, in which the state and civil society cooperate in designing and implementing policies. In the context of national discipline, CSOs can engage in public campaigns, policy advocacy, and direct oversight of bureaucratic practice and law enforcement. Their monitoring role also helps prevent the state from reverting to coercive approaches antithetical to democratic values.
This decade of institutionalization thus marks a critical milestone in the long journey of building national discipline. Digital governance ensures that state personnel discipline is monitored objectively and transparently; meritocratic systems close avenues for patronage that undermine bureaucratic integrity; and civil society engagement guarantees that discipline remains an internalized civic virtue rather than a tool of repression. If these three pillars are consistently upheld, national discipline in the 2030–2040 period will become not merely a suite of state policies, but a social system embedded in Indonesians’ everyday practices.
2040–2050: Consolidation and Social Transformation
The decade from 2040 to 2050 marks a phase of consolidation, a period during which national discipline, previously institutionalized within legal, cultural, and institutional frameworks, must be reinforced as an integral component of Indonesia’s national development agenda and global strategy. At this stage, discipline is no longer viewed merely as a domestic social instrument, but as a long-term development asset underpinning the achievement of Indonesia’s Golden Vision 2045 and global agendas, such as the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
Integrating discipline as a pillar in the National Long-Term Development Plan (RPJPN) 2045 constitutes a strategic and non-negotiable step. As the country’s macro-development blueprint guiding policy over two decades, the RPJPN must embed national discipline not only as a cultural value but also as a cross-sectoral policy instrument. Discipline can be conceptualized as a cross-cutting issue that influences policy effectiveness across various sectors, including education, health, the economy, defense, and the environment. Public policy literature emphasizes that cross-sectoral issues, such as discipline, must be explicitly institutionalized to ensure binding influence across governmental institutions (Howlett & Cashore, 2014). By embedding discipline as a pillar of the RPJPN, Indonesia guarantees that social order and consistent governance will serve as the foundation of long-term development success.
In parallel with the RPJPN, national discipline must also be aligned with Indonesia’s SDG commitments. The SDGs emphasize the interconnection of economic growth, social inclusion, and environmental sustainability (United Nations, 2015). Discipline is directly relevant to multiple goals, including poverty reduction, quality education, strong and effective institutions, and sustainable urban development. Societies with higher levels of social discipline are better able to manage resources sustainably, minimize legal non-compliance, and strengthen institutional capacity. Thus, national discipline should be understood as an enabler for achieving comprehensive SDG goals.
To ensure consistent implementation, it is necessary to develop a national indicator that objectively measures the quality of public discipline. This could take the form of a Civic Discipline Index (CDI), designed to evaluate the extent to which discipline has been internalized across societal strata. The CDI might capture variables such as legal compliance, bureaucratic integrity, citizen participation in maintaining public spaces, and societal commitment to collective norms. Similar models have been employed to assess the quality of democracy and governance, such as the World Bank’s Worldwide Governance Indicators (Kaufmann et al., 2010) and the Rule of Law Index published by the World Justice Project (2019). With the CDI, both government and society would possess a systematic tool to evaluate progress and weaknesses in fostering national discipline. Moreover, the CDI could function as a comparative instrument situating Indonesia within global benchmarks of social discipline and democratic governance.
Consolidated discipline in this decade must also be positioned as a strategic resource for Indonesia’s global competitiveness. In a knowledge-based economy, research and technology represent decisive factors of national progress. Yet research and technology cannot thrive without robust discipline in institutional management, research practice, and academic ethics. Advanced countries demonstrate that discipline in research and innovation fosters productive, transparent, and competitive ecosystems (Etzkowitz & Leydesdorff, 2000). Economically, discipline is crucial in creating a stable investment climate, reducing transaction costs, and boosting global market confidence in domestic institutions (North, 1990). In the technological domain, discipline in data governance, privacy protection, and ethical regulation will determine Indonesia’s ability to compete in the global digital economy.
By positioning discipline as a component of global competitiveness, Indonesia not only strengthens its domestic foundation but also enhances its international reputation as a democratic, orderly, and innovative state. This will afford Indonesia greater leverage in international cooperation across economics, education, and security. Accordingly, the 2040–2050 period presents a strategic juncture to ensure that national discipline extends beyond the domestic sphere, emerging as a defining characteristic of Indonesia’s role as a significant actor in the multipolar global order.
2050–2060: Discipline as Civilizational Capital
From 2050 to 2060, national discipline—built upon normative foundations, cultural internalization, and sustained institutionalization—must reach its highest stage: transformation into a nation’s civilizational capital. At this point, discipline should no longer be perceived merely as a social mechanism or governance tool, but as a shared value that constitutes the collective identity of the Indonesian people. Similar to gotong royong as a longstanding social ethos, democratic discipline can serve as a fundamental norm guiding citizen behavior across politics, economics, science, and culture.
Elevating discipline into a shared value requires more than regulation and institutionalization; it necessitates intergenerational internalization, growing into a social habitus in Pierre Bourdieu’s (1977) sense—a system of dispositions embedded within individuals and collectives, shaping thought, action, and perception. While earlier stages required regulatory frameworks and bureaucratic incentives, during this period discipline would function automatically as a social norm—no longer contested but accepted as a shared moral standard. Thus, discipline becomes an integral part of the nation’s civilization, underpinning sustainable development while reinforcing national identity in the global era.
Successfully embedding discipline as a form of civilizational capital will also position Indonesia as a model of democratic discipline in Southeast Asia. For decades, regional states have faced a dilemma between maintaining political stability and promoting democratic freedoms. Some have emphasized order at the expense of liberty, while others have privileged liberty with weak attention to order. Should Indonesia demonstrate that discipline can be cultivated without repression, but rather through collective awareness within a democratic framework, it will offer an alternative model for other developing nations. Such a model underscores that discipline and democracy are not mutually exclusive but mutually reinforcing for stable and inclusive governance (Merkel, 2004; Diamond, 1999).
Indonesia’s role as a model of democratic discipline will enhance its regional and global leadership. In international relations theory, soft power is a vital instrument of global leadership, influencing other states not through military force or economic coercion but through the appeal of values, culture, and moral legitimacy (Nye, 2004). Democratic discipline as a shared national value can thus serve as a new form of soft power, signaling to the world that Indonesia can manage freedom while maintaining order within a democratic framework. This reputation will enhance Indonesia’s credibility in international forums—such as ASEAN, the G20, and the United Nations—expanding its influence in shaping a fairer and more sustainable global order.
Moreover, discipline as civilizational capital will underpin Indonesia’s global leadership in strategic domains such as the digital economy, scientific research, technological innovation, and climate and environmental governance. Societies with high social discipline are better equipped to manage the complexities of global development, from energy transition to digital transformation and cross-border security cooperation. In a multipolar global order characterized by uncertainty, national strength is measured not only by material capacity but also by social cohesion and the consistency of values that sustain resilience (Acharya, 2014). Democratic discipline will enhance Indonesia’s resilience, enabling it to navigate global disruptions without losing its identity, while inspiring other nations seeking a balance between social order and democratic freedom.
Thus, the period from 2050 to 2060 represents the culmination of the long process of national discipline building. At this stage, discipline will have passed through normative, educative, institutional, and consolidation phases to finally become civilizational capital. Democratic discipline will stand as Indonesia’s collective identity, making the country a model of democratic discipline in the region, while supporting global leadership through the attraction of values and moral credibility. This transformation demonstrates that discipline is not merely about compliance but about civilization itself: how a nation governs itself consciously, consistently, and responsibly for collective well-being and meaningful contributions to the world.
Indicators for Measuring the Quality of National Discipline
Measuring the quality of national discipline is a crucial stage to ensure that policies do not remain at the normative or institutional level but can be objectively evaluated through measurable instruments. In the public policy literature, indicators are understood as policy instruments that provide insight into implementation effectiveness, facilitating evidence-based decision-making (Marradi, 1990). Without clear indicators, national discipline risks devolving into a mere political slogan without empirical grounding. Accordingly, a set of evaluative tools is required to capture the multidimensional nature of the discipline, encompassing individual, institutional, and structural aspects.
The Civic Discipline Index (CDI) is designed as the primary indicator to measure citizens’ adherence to public norms. This index highlights the social aspect of discipline, including compliance with traffic regulations, concern for environmental cleanliness, and participation in maintaining public facilities. Putnam (1993) argues that social order derived from civic virtue constitutes the foundation of high-quality democracy, as disciplined citizens are better able to balance individual freedom with collective interests. With the CDI, the state can assess the extent to which discipline has been internalized as a social habit rather than enforced compliance. The CDI can also serve as a comparative tool across regions, enabling local governments to be evaluated based on their success in fostering civic discipline among their populations.
The Public Integrity Index serves as a measure of the adherence to integrity standards by bureaucratic and public officials. Bureaucratic discipline has a direct impact on the state’s credibility in the eyes of its citizens. When the bureaucracy fails to enforce internal rules and remains mired in corruption, it is unrealistic to expect the broader public to emulate disciplined behavior. Kaufmann, Kraay, and Mastruzzi (2010) demonstrate in their study of the Worldwide Governance Indicators that bureaucratic integrity correlates positively with societal compliance with the law. Such an index could measure variables such as adherence to civil service regulations, punctuality, budget transparency, and the absence of patronage practices. The Public Integrity Index thus enables systematic monitoring and accountability of discipline within the state apparatus.
The Rule of Law Index serves as a tool for assessing the effectiveness of legal enforcement. National discipline cannot flourish without consistent and fair legal certainty. The World Justice Project (2019) emphasizes that the rule of law is foundational to social order, as only laws enforced impartially and non-discriminatorily can foster public compliance. This index evaluates key dimensions, including access to justice, judicial independence, and the effectiveness of law enforcement agencies. Selective or politicized enforcement undermines public discipline by eroding the legitimacy of collective norms. The Rule of Law Index thus acts as the bridge between democratic discipline and the consolidation of a democratic state under the rule of law.
The Open Government Index complements the preceding indicators by assessing transparency and citizen engagement in the oversight process. Democratic discipline can only be sustained if the public has access to government information and space for participatory monitoring. Janssen, Charalabidis, and Zuiderwijk (2012) explain that open government data enhances governmental accountability while fostering citizens’ sense of ownership of public policy. The Open Government Index can measure the degree to which civil society is involved in monitoring bureaucratic practices, reporting violations, and participating in the formulation of policies. This indicator is also essential in preventing discipline from becoming coercively enforced, as transparency and public participation act as democratic safeguards.
The Global Competitiveness Index (GCI), developed by the World Economic Forum, adds an international dimension to measuring national discipline. Discipline is not solely about domestic compliance but also a determinant of global competitiveness. Schwab (2019) emphasizes that countries with high levels of public discipline, clean bureaucracies, and transparent legal systems are more competitive in attracting investment, fostering innovation, and enhancing economic productivity. In the Indonesian context, discipline can serve as intangible capital that strengthens competitiveness in research, technology, and industry. With the GCI, Indonesia’s position in the global economy can be assessed in relation to its disciplinary culture, providing evidence of how national discipline contributes to tangible outcomes in global competitiveness.
By combining these five indicators—Civic Discipline Index, Public Integrity Index, Rule of Law Index, Open Government Index, and Global Competitiveness Index—the measurement of national discipline quality covers all key dimensions: civic awareness, bureaucratic integrity, legal effectiveness, governmental transparency, and global competitiveness. This multidimensional system ensures that discipline is not only normatively defined but also empirically measured through verifiable quantitative and qualitative data. Furthermore, it enables government and society alike to jointly assess achievements, identify areas for improvement, and formulate corrective policies. In this way, national discipline can be positioned as a measurable, observable, and integrated civic virtue, embedded within democratic development as Indonesia advances toward its Golden Vision 2045 and global leadership by 2060.
Conclusion
National discipline in the Indonesian context can no longer be understood merely as a coercive instrument of the state to enforce citizen compliance. The experience of the New Order demonstrated that discipline built upon repressive control produced only formalistic compliance without genuine internalization of civic values (Aspinall & Mietzner, 2010). The democratic transition after 1998 opened political and social freedoms, yet it also introduced the challenge of democratic disarray, marked by low legal compliance, widespread petty corruption, weak bureaucratic discipline, and a deficit of collective awareness in maintaining public space (Mietzner, 2012).
In nation-building, discipline occupies a highly strategic position. It is a prerequisite for social order, effective governance, and global competitiveness. Democratic discipline must be conceptualized as a civic virtue, reflecting citizens’ willingness to limit their individual freedom to safeguard collective interests and ensure the proper functioning of democratic institutions (Putnam, 1993; Etzioni, 1995). In this sense, discipline is not only the foundation of democratic consolidation but also a form of social capital that shapes the trajectory of long-term development toward the Golden Indonesia 2045 vision.
Theoretical and conceptual frameworks highlight the need for a transition from discipline as social control to discipline as an internalized value. Parsons (1951) regarded discipline as an integrative mechanism that sustains social order, whereas Foucault (1977) warned of its dangers as a repressive instrument of power. Putnam (1993) and Etzioni (1995) offer a middle path, situating discipline within the realm of civic virtue rooted in citizens’ sense of social responsibility. Within a democratic framework, discipline must also be institutionalized through both horizontal legitimacy among citizens and vertical legitimacy within institutions, as emphasized by Merkel (2004). This is implemented through collaborative governance between the state and civil society (Ansell & Gash, 2008).
The roadmap for national discipline development is envisioned through a long-term horizon extending to 2060. In the initial phase, from 2025 to 2030, the focus lies on establishing normative and cultural foundations through regulatory harmonization, the integration of civic education, and nationwide campaigns to cultivate collective awareness. The 2030–2040 phase emphasizes institutionalization through digital governance, meritocratic bureaucracy, and the engagement of civil society organizations in disciplinary oversight. The 2040–2050 decade marks consolidation, with discipline institutionalized as a pillar of development in the RPJPN 2045, assessed through the Civic Discipline Index, and positioned as a source of global competitiveness. Finally, the 2050–2060 stage represents the culmination of transformation, where discipline evolves into civilizational capital, positioning Indonesia as a model of democratic discipline in Southeast Asia and strengthening its global leadership through value-based soft power (Nye, 2004).
The strategy for structuring national discipline has been elaborated across five core dimensions. The normative dimension emphasizes harmonizing regulations with democratic and human rights principles; the educative dimension focuses on civic education and character formation; the institutional dimension prioritizes meritocracy and bureaucratic reform; the socio-cultural dimension seeks to foster collective disciplinary culture, while the technological dimension enhances transparency and accountability through digital monitoring systems. These five dimensions are mapped within a policy matrix that clearly identifies key actors, indicators, and timelines, ensuring consistent cross-sectoral implementation.
To guarantee effectiveness, the measurement of national discipline is anchored in five main instruments. The Civic Discipline Index assesses public awareness of upholding collective norms; the Public Integrity Index measures bureaucratic integrity; the Rule of Law Index evaluates the effectiveness of legal enforcement; the Open Government Index assesses transparency and civic participation; and the Global Competitiveness Index links discipline to Indonesia’s position in global competition. Together, these indicators enable national discipline to be evaluated both objectively and comprehensively, providing the empirical foundation for continuous policy refinement.
In conclusion, the central argument of this study is that national discipline must be transformed from a mere instrument of control into a democratic civic virtue. This transformation necessitates a long-term strategy with structured phases, cross-sectoral integration, and active participation from civil society. If discipline can be embedded as a collective value and measured consistently, Indonesia has the potential not only to achieve the vision of Golden Indonesia 2045 but also to establish itself as a stable, competitive, and influential democratic state within the multipolar global order of 2060.
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