Mobilizing Mainstream Islam explains the rise and changing shape of religious nationalism in Indonesia after the fall of Suharto in 1998. In the 2000s, a time of electoral democratization, Indonesias religious and political landscape experienced significant competition and reshuffling as religious and political elites formed an alliance to challenge Indonesias official policies of tolerance and religious pluralism. As Saskia Schfer argues, state and religious authorities have in the post-Suharto era constructed a homogenized, bureaucratized form of Islam which she terms "e;Mainstream Islam"e; that deliberately marginalizes people framed as minorities, such as Ahmadiyya, Shia Muslims and LGBTQI-identifying people, through securitization and theological delegitimization. She shows how the discourses of human rights have only sharpened the contours of these identities within the national imaginary.Through diverse case studies, Mobilizing Mainstream Islam explores how competitive electoral politics, decentralization, and media fragmentation facilitated the emergence of Islamist majoritarian rule and compares Indonesias decentralized model with Malaysias state-driven approach. Schfer examines how competition over resources and public support shape religious nationalism. As the case of Indonesia illuminates broader global trends of religious nationalism, this book offers fresh insights into the challenges of maintaining pluralism in electoral democracies.