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ID115289
Title ProperFear of the kampung, fear of unrest
Other Title Informationurban unemployment and colonial policy in 1930s Java
LanguageENG
AuthorIngleson, John
Publication2012.
Summary / Abstract (Note)This paper discusses the responses of The Netherlands Indies colonial government to the rise in urban unemployment in Java brought about by the 1930s Depression. At least one in six of the large European/Eurasian population in the colony, and an even larger proportion of urban Indonesian workers, became unemployed as a result of the Depression. The colonial government and the European community were greatly concerned that the growth of unemployment among Europeans would lead to destitution for many, ultimately forcing them into the native kampung1. They were also concerned about what they saw as the moral decay of local-born European/Eurasian youth who were unemployed in unprecedented numbers. Furthermore, the European community feared that the growth in unemployment among western-educated Indonesians in the towns and cities in Java would create a fertile recruitment ground for nationalist political parties leading to urban unrest. Fear of the kampung for destitute Europeans, and fear of urban unrest from unemployed western-educated Indonesians, shaped the colonial government's responses to urban unemployment. The impact of the Depression on both Indonesian and European unemployed in the towns and cities in Java triggered lengthy debates on the role of the state in the provision of social security.
`In' analytical NoteModern Asian Studies Vol. 46, No.6; Nov 2012: p.1633-1671
Journal SourceModern Asian Studies Vol. 46, No.6; Nov 2012: p.1633-1671
Key WordsNetherland ;  Urban Unemployment ;  Colonial Policy ;  Java ;  Kampung ;  Europe ;  Eurasia