Can Formalisation of Adat Land Regulation Protect Community Rights? The Case of the Orang Asli Sorowako and the Karongsi'e/Dongi
Loading...
Date
Authors
Robinson, Kathryn
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Taylor & Francis Group
Abstract
Formalisation of customary rights in land is currently being pursued by an increasing
number of Indonesian rural communities, who wish to protect their livelihoods and
prevent dispossession in favour of commercial concessions. This trend has accelerated
during the current presidency (Joko Widodo). This is a dramatic shift from the denial
of recognition of customary rights during Soeharto’s New Order. This article reports
on the ongoing efforts by the indigenous peoples of Sorowako, South Sulawesi, who
lost their land to a multinational mining concession during the New Order, to have
their rights acknowledged and their economic losses compensated. I argue that in the
current political era, their claims of indigenous status have been overlooked by the
state which has given recognition to another group who are more able to enact the
current ‘script’ of indigeneity. And in a significant shift, the contemporary generation
of young indigenous adults in Sorowako emphasise their claims for cultural
recognition as well as for distributive rights. This case leads me to question whether
formalisation of customary rights, which in essence means converting them to
individual title, addresses the questions of distributive justice that gave rise to claims
of customary rights in the New Order period.
Description
Keywords
Citation
Collections
Source
The Asia Pacific Journal of Anthropology
Type
Book Title
Entity type
Access Statement
License Rights
Restricted until
2099-12-31