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ID140241
Title ProperPolitical contestation, resource control and conservation in an era of decentralisation at Indonesia's Kerinci Seblat national park
LanguageENG
AuthorBettinger, Keith Andrew
Summary / Abstract (Note)Since the fall of long-time strongman Suharto and his authoritarian ‘New Order’ government in 1998, Indonesia has embarked upon a series of decentralisation and democratisation reforms. This new era of decentralised politics has come to be known as Reformasi and has significantly altered the political landscape of the archipelago as national and subnational levels of administration continue to contest the balance of power. Indonesia's national parks, which remain under the authority of the national government, have become arenas for negotiated encounters between local resource users, aspiring district elites and the national government. This essay explores three legacies of incomplete and unfinished decentralisation as they related to national-park-based conservation, using Sumatra's Kerinci Seblat National Park as a case study.
`In' analytical NoteAsia Pacific Viewpoint Vol. 56, No.2; Aug 2015: p.252–266
Journal SourceAsia Pacific Viewpoint 2015-08 56, 2
Key WordsIndonesia ;  Political Ecology ;  Decentralisation ;  Conservation ;  Democratisation ;  National Parks