'Can We Get Hak Ulayat?': Land and Community in Pasir and Nunukan, East Kalimantan
Publication year
2008Author(s)
Publisher
UC Berkeley : Center for Southeast Asia Studies
In
Proceedings UC Berkeley-UCLA Joint Conference on Southeast Asia: Ten Years After: Reformasi and New Social Movements in Indonesia, 1998-2008, pp. 1-26Related links
Publication type
Article in monograph or in proceedings
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Organization
SW OZ RSCR CAOS
Languages used
English (eng)
Book title
Proceedings UC Berkeley-UCLA Joint Conference on Southeast Asia: Ten Years After: Reformasi and New Social Movements in Indonesia, 1998-2008
Page start
p. 1
Page end
p. 26
Subject
Anthropology and Development StudiesAbstract
This paper is a case study into the effects of hak ulayat (indigenous land rights) claims on policies
in the local districts of Nunukan and Pasir, East Kalimantan, after the collapse of the New Order
regime in Indonesia in 1998. Nunukan has recognised hak ulayat, while Pasir intended to do so but
abandoned this plan after popular protest. Whereas Indonesian law has undertaken considerable
steps to define hak ulayat, studying district government considerations of ulayat claims through a
strictly legal approach is too narrow to be of much actual use. The influence of local conceptions
of hak ulayat and the stance of local authorities on the subject can be better understood through
the inclusion of social, political and power relations which bring other interests to the fore. Such
an analysis shows that not only is the law not the only authority in regulating hak ulayat, it is also
caught in an inconvenient split between aspirations to nationwide applicability and the demands
of local diversity.
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- Academic publications [243859]
- Faculty of Social Sciences [30014]
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