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SUMATRA (9) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   110046


Displacement, resettlement, and multi-local livelihoods: positioning migrant legitimacy in Lampung, Indonesia / Elmhirst, Rebecca   Journal Article
Elmhirst, Rebecca Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
Summary/Abstract This article examines shifting attitudes toward rural migrants in Lampung Province, on the Indonesian island of Sumatra, in the context of a history of enclosure, commercial expansion, and dispossession. The author examines how contemporary multi-local livelihoods in Lampung reflect an adaptation to the vulnerabilities associated with being a migrant, as people position themselves to qualify for livelihood resources. The author's interpretation draws on Michel Foucault's analysis of the production of governable subjects and, in particular, norms of conduct that produce subjectivities and identities that "fit." The article explores how different policy phases associated with environmental governance in Lampung have created contrasting positionings and norms of conduct for migrants, as they have been defined, on the one hand, as pioneer entrepreneurs, bringing progress to Indonesia's hinterland, and, on the other, as forest squatters, threatening the cultural and ecological integrity of the province. The author suggests that rural migrants have attempted to resolve their problematic positioning through multi-local livelihoods, which combine access to nonlocal income through temporary migration with the maintenance of a foothold that signals belonging and legitimate entitlement to state resources.
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2
ID:   163242


Examining the interface of sustainability programmes and livelihoods in the Semendo highlands of Indonesia / Bray, Joshua; Neilson, Jeffrey   Journal Article
Bray, Joshua Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Voluntary sustainability standards are used as both a means of securing coffee supply by large coffee firms and a development intervention to address rural poverty and environmental management in the Global South. Using a case‐study approach, we have examined the interface between a value‐chain sustainability programme and the livelihood trajectories of smallholder producers in upland Sumatra. Our research found the programme has had minimal impacts for coffee producers to date. The level of commitment required of producers appears incompatible with the particular way that coffee is currently embedded within local landscapes, livelihoods and poverty alleviation pathways. Various sustainability standards articulate a narrative of rural development underpinned by an assumption that agricultural modernisation is the preferred pathway out of poverty for rural households. As a result, there is some risk that sustainability programmes may be inadvertently attempting to encourage household investment in a particular kind of agriculture, which is intended to assist sustainability of supply, but is poorly aligned with prevailing processes of poverty alleviation. These observations are based on a detailed study of agrarian change among the Semendo people of South Sumatra province, where processes of rural development are far more complex than assumptions presented by mainstream sustainability standards.
Key Words Sumatra  Livelihoods  Standards  Coffee  Certification  Value-Chains 
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3
ID:   114911


Exploration in Andaman sea / Biswas, Kamakhya Pada   Journal Article
Biswas, Kamakhya Pada Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
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4
ID:   134281


History of Indonesia: early and medieval / Chatterji, B R 1967  Book
Chatterji, B R Book
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Publication Meerut, Meenakshi Prakashan, 1967.
Description vi, 205p.Hbk
Contents B
Key Words Indonesia  Sumatra  Bali  Java  Srivijaya  Indian Literature 
History 
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Copies: C:1/I:0,R:1,Q:0
Circulation
Accession#Call#Current LocationStatusPolicyLocation
057916959.8/CHA 057916MainOn ShelfReference books 
5
ID:   135063


India as known to the ancient world or India's intercourse in ancient times with her neighbours, Egypt, Western Asia, Greece, Ro / Banerjee, Gauranganath 2006  Book
Banerjee, Gauranganath Book
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Publication New Delhi, Asian Educational Service, 2006.
Description 73p.Hbk
Contents Old Publication
Standard Number 8120605616
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Copies: C:1/I:0,R:0,Q:0
Circulation
Accession#Call#Current LocationStatusPolicyLocation
057974934/BAN 057974MainOn ShelfGeneral 
6
ID:   053663


Regional empowerment and ethnic conflict in North Sumatra / Agustono, Budi; Kivimaki, Timo 2; 2004  Journal Article
Kivimaki, Timo Journal Article
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Publication 2004.
Key Words Ethnic Conflict  Indonesia  Southeast Asia  Sumatra 
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7
ID:   124291


State formation and the evolution of naval strategies in the Me / Heng, Derek   Journal Article
Heng, Derek Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract The Strait of Melaka and connected waterways have been critical to, and directly affected, the formation of littoral states, societies and economies in eastern Sumatra, the Riau Islands, the Malay Peninsula, and Singapore. The history and nature of statehood in the region is interrelated to the way in which naval capabilities evolved, but, as argued in this article, perhaps not in the straightforward fashion often assumed. Naval capabilities and strategies evolved in tandem with state policy to adapt to changes in the wider Asian maritime political economy which was dominated at various times by China and India. This article examines the factors that affected maritime policy in the Melaka Straits c. 500 to 1500 CE, and the extent to which these furthered the viability of the mainly Malay port-polities, and in particular the regional hegemonic state of Srivijaya in eastern Sumatra. The study utilises textual records, epigraphic materials, and literature to reconstruct a more nuanced picture of maritime states and naval power in premodern Southeast Asia.
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8
ID:   139604


Strife of the soil? unsettling transmigrant conflicts in Indonesia / Barter, Shane Joshua; Cote, Isabelle   Article
Barter, Shane Joshua Article
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Summary/Abstract Challenging conventional wisdom, this article argues that Indonesia — long home to both large-scale transmigration programmes and a range of conflicts — has not witnessed transmigrant conflicts. The vast majority of Indonesian transmigrants were resettled in parts of Sumatra which have remained peaceful. In some conflicts, the role of transmigration has been exaggerated. In others, interethnic violence has involved spontaneous migrants rather than state-led transmigrants. We conclude with a discussion of two potential outliers, where violence has been directed towards transmigrants, but only those from disaster-affected regions who arrived en masse. This article argues for a more nuanced understanding of the distinctions between different forms of internal migration, some of which have the potential to spark future violence in recipient areas and communities.
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9
ID:   144101


Two hitherto unknown Indonesian tsunamis of the seventeenth century: probabilities and context / Reid, Anthony   Article
Reid, Anthony Article
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Summary/Abstract The 2004 tsunami intensified fruitful scientific research into dating past tectonic events in Sumatra, though without comparable work on Java. Geology needs to be informed by careful historical research on documented events, but less such work has been done in Indonesia than in other tectonically endangered areas. This paper examines the historical evidence for two hitherto unknown tsunamis of the seventeenth century. In better-researched Sumatra, Dutch reports that a flood from the sea devastated Aceh in 1660 adds to what the geologists have discovered on the ground. By contrast geological research has barely begun on the south coast of Java. Javanese sources for events before 1800 need careful re-evaluation. The myths around Ratu Kidul, the ‘Queen of the South Seas’, together with more chronologically reliable dated babads, point to a major tsunami in 1618 on the coast south of Yogyakarta.
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