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Human Ecology | 2009

Policies, Political-Economy, and Swidden in Southeast Asia

Jefferson Fox; Yayoi Fujita; Dimbab Ngidang; Nancy Lee Peluso; Lesley Potter; Niken Sakuntaladewi; Janet C. Sturgeon; David Thomas

For centuries swidden was an important farming practice found across the girth of Southeast Asia. Today, however, these systems are changing and sometimes disappearing at a pace never before experienced. In order to explain the demise or transitioning of swidden we need to understand the rapid and massive changes that have and are occurring in the political and economic environment in which these farmers operate. Swidden farming has always been characterized by change, but since the onset of modern independent nation states, governments and markets in Southeast Asia have transformed the terms of swiddeners’ everyday lives to a degree that is significantly different from that ever experienced before. In this paper we identified six factors that have contributed to the demise or transformation of swidden systems, and support these arguments with examples from China (Xishuangbanna), Laos, Thailand, Malaysia, and Indonesia. These trends include classifying swiddeners as ethnic minorities within nation-states, dividing the landscape into forest and permanent agriculture, expansion of forest departments and the rise of conservation, resettlement, privatization and commoditization of land and land-based production, and expansion of market infrastructure and the promotion of industrial agriculture. In addition we note a growing trend toward a transition from rural to urban livelihoods and expanding urban-labor markets.


Development and Change | 2000

Reinventing Imperata: Revaluing Alang‐Alang Grasslands in Indonesia

Lesley Potter; Justin Lee; Kathryn Thorburn

This article takes a new look at the economic value and cultural significance of Imperata cylindrica grasslands in Indonesia, drawing particularly on fieldwork in Bali, Lombok and West Timor, where the focus is on the use of alang-alang grass for roof thatch. The development of tourism has resulted in the commodification of thatch in Bali and Lombok for quality roofing and insulation. With its visual impact reinforcing its traditional cultural significance, the thatched roof has become a tourist artefact, its resulting high price elevating Imperata to the status of temporary cash crop and lucrative export. In West Timor, on the other hand, the grass has become a scarce commodity for roofing traditional houses. While it lacks the high prices of Bali-Lombok, in Timor the cheapness of thatch in this time of economic crisis has increased its value over alternatives. This article explores the valuing and revaluing of Imperata within various agro-ecological and economic niches, and provides case studies of some of the highly adaptive and opportunistic responses of local people to land-use change. While the Bali case represents an extreme example of the grass as commodity, the more significant view of its value is the place it continues to occupy, in a subsistence or contingency sense, in many rural economies.


Bulletin of Indonesian Economic Studies | 2010

Kalimantan in the firing line: a note on the effects of the global financial crisis

Lesley Potter

Abstract This note examines the impact of the global financial crisis on Kalimantans four provinces. Although growth in the region slowed dramatically with the onset of the crisis, only in the dominant province of East Kalimantan did overall growth turn (slightly) negative. There were strong negative effects on the agricultural, manufacturing and mining sectors, but these differed greatly across individual provinces. This study presents evidence on price trends for three key commodities – palm oil, rubber and gold – and discusses the effect on farmers of the steep falls in palm oil and rubber prices. Surprisingly, the crisis had remarkably little impact on open unemployment, and the ongoing decline in poverty was hardly interrupted (although this may simply have reflected the timing of the surveys used to measure poverty). The end of the crisis saw oil palm making a speedier recovery than rubber, with gold mining remaining the ‘safety net’ for poor farmers.


Human Ecology | 2009

Who Counts? Demography of Swidden Cultivators in Southeast Asia

Ole Mertz; Stephen J. Leisz; Andreas Heinimann; Kanok Rerkasem; Thiha; Wolfram Dressler; Van Cu Pham; Kim Chi Vu; Dietrich Schmidt-Vogt; Carol J. Pierce Colfer; Michael Epprecht; Christine Padoch; Lesley Potter


Journal of Southeast Asian Studies | 1995

Social Aspects of Forestry in Southeast Asia: A Review of Postwar Trends in the Scholarly Literature

Nancy Lee Peluso; Peter Vandergeest; Lesley Potter


Asia Pacific Viewpoint | 2001

Agricultural Intensification in Indonesia: Outside Pressures and Indigenous Strategies

Lesley Potter


Asia-Pacific Population Journal | 2003

Government-organized distant resettlement and Three Gorges Project, China

Yan Tan; Graeme Hugo; Lesley Potter


Asia Pacific Viewpoint | 2004

Tree crop smallholders, capitalism, and adat: Studies in Riau Province1, Indonesia

Lesley Potter; Simon Badcock


Asia Pacific Viewpoint | 2012

New transmigration 'paradigm' in Indonesia: Examples from Kalimantan

Lesley Potter


Asia Pacific Viewpoint | 2009

Resource periphery, corridor, heartland: contesting land use in the Kalimantan/Malaysia borderlands

Lesley Potter

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Yan Tan

University of Adelaide

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André Faaij

University of Groningen

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Graeme Hugo

University of Adelaide

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Colin Filer

Australian National University

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