Ecological disturbances: Negotiating indigeneity and access to land in Indonesia
Publikation: Bidrag til bog/antologi/rapport › Bidrag til bog/antologi › Forskning › fagfællebedømt
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Ecological disturbances : Negotiating indigeneity and access to land in Indonesia. / Bräuchler, Birgit.
Plural Ecologies in Southeast Asia: Hierarchies, Conflicts, and Coexistence. red. / Timo Duile; Kristina Großmann; Michaela Haug; Guido Sprenger. London : Routledge, 2023. s. 112-131.Publikation: Bidrag til bog/antologi/rapport › Bidrag til bog/antologi › Forskning › fagfællebedømt
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TY - CHAP
T1 - Ecological disturbances
T2 - Negotiating indigeneity and access to land in Indonesia
AU - Bräuchler, Birgit
PY - 2023
Y1 - 2023
N2 - Indonesia’s current president Joko Widodo wants to develop Indonesia from its margins, with mixed results so far. One target area for capitalist investment are the Aru Islands in Maluku Province, Eastern Indonesia. Such investment plans rarely cater for cultural needs or analyse their social compatibility. Governments, investors and local population groups invoke diverging ecologies. Government and investor argue that nature must be adapted to the economic needs of the islands’ inhabitants so that the area can finally prosper. For people indigenous to the area societal relations and cultural meanings are more important; for them, such capitalist intrusions cause the disturbance of an ecological balance that is deeply ingrained in the cultural and societal set-up of indigenous livelihoods. Given existing power relations in Indonesian politics and the weak legal standing of indigenous people, such clashes are often reduced to a hegemonic state against oppressed marginalised people, which overlooks or ignores power struggles and divergent interpretations within the respective parties. This chapter focuses on these tensions within the Aruese adat community and follows the pluralisation and diversification of indigenous ecologies in response to outside interventions that threaten to drive a wedge between those supporting and those resisting the investment plans.
AB - Indonesia’s current president Joko Widodo wants to develop Indonesia from its margins, with mixed results so far. One target area for capitalist investment are the Aru Islands in Maluku Province, Eastern Indonesia. Such investment plans rarely cater for cultural needs or analyse their social compatibility. Governments, investors and local population groups invoke diverging ecologies. Government and investor argue that nature must be adapted to the economic needs of the islands’ inhabitants so that the area can finally prosper. For people indigenous to the area societal relations and cultural meanings are more important; for them, such capitalist intrusions cause the disturbance of an ecological balance that is deeply ingrained in the cultural and societal set-up of indigenous livelihoods. Given existing power relations in Indonesian politics and the weak legal standing of indigenous people, such clashes are often reduced to a hegemonic state against oppressed marginalised people, which overlooks or ignores power struggles and divergent interpretations within the respective parties. This chapter focuses on these tensions within the Aruese adat community and follows the pluralisation and diversification of indigenous ecologies in response to outside interventions that threaten to drive a wedge between those supporting and those resisting the investment plans.
U2 - 10.4324/9781003368182
DO - 10.4324/9781003368182
M3 - Book chapter
SP - 112
EP - 131
BT - Plural Ecologies in Southeast Asia
A2 - Duile, Timo
A2 - Großmann, Kristina
A2 - Haug, Michaela
A2 - Sprenger, Guido
PB - Routledge
CY - London
ER -
ID: 360702578