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ID169145
Title ProperUrban poverty alleviation strategies in Yogyakarta, Indonesia
Other Title Informationcontrasting opportunities for community development
LanguageENG
AuthorRoitman, Sonia
Summary / Abstract (Note)A multidimensional understanding of poverty includes the access of poor groups to decision‐making processes based on their needs and aspirations. However, the realisation of this ‘right to make decisions’ faces multiple obstacles. Over the last 20 years in Indonesia, in a context of a more democratic political environment and policy decentralisation, poverty alleviation policies have followed institutional arrangements to provide communities with opportunities for greater participation in development projects. Poverty data show a clear improvement in the living conditions of urban poor citizens in Indonesia; however, it is unclear whether poor communities have become stronger and more independent from public grants and better able to make their own decisions. This research analysed two urban poor communities in Yogyakarta, Indonesia, and found that some communities working on participatory poverty alleviation strategies still face obstacles to becoming more independent and making their own decisions because they remain part of an historical legacy of top‐down approaches to poverty, highly dependent on government support and working only within ‘invited spaces’. Conversely, those communities with more limited access to government funding have been more innovative in their strategies and have created ‘invented spaces’ for collective action that allows them to be more independent and empowered.
`In' analytical NoteAsia Pacific Viewpoint Vol. 60, No.3; Dec 2019: p.386-401
Journal SourceAsia Pacific Viewpoint 2019-12 60, 3
Key WordsIndonesia ;  Community development ;  Poverty alleviation ;  Yogyakarta ;  Community Empowerment