The Subak in Diaspora: Balinese Farmers and the Subak in South Sulawesi
Tóm tắt
The subak has a long history as an irrigators’ institution on Bali. It has also spread across Indonesia along with Balinese farmers who were resettled by colonial and post-colonial governments or who have migrated spontaneously since colonial times. While subaks have been much researched in Bali itself, little is known about subaks outside Bali. Luwu District in South Sulawesi is one of the areas where thousands of Balinese families settled in the last four decades. Based on research in this transmigration area, this paper analyzes the emergence and development of the subak in relation to the development of irrigation infrastructure of a state-built irrigation system. A comparison between two Balinese settlements in the same system shows that differences in infrastructural and managerial conditions and arrangements between parts of the irrigation system were major determinants of the institutional space allowed for the subak and ways in which the subaks developed.
Tài liệu tham khảo
Boelens, R. (1998). Collective management and social construction of peasant irrigation systems: conceptual introduction. In Boelens, R., and Dávila, G. (eds.), Searching for Equity. Conceptions of Justice and Equity in Peasant Irrigation. Van Gorcum, Assen, pp. 81–99.
Boelens, R., and Zwarteveen, M. (2002). Gender dimensions of water control in Andean irrigation. In Boelens, R., and Hoogendam, P. (eds.), Water Rights and Empowerment. Van Gorcum, Assen, pp. 75–109.
Boon, J. A. (1977). The Anthropological Romance of Bali 1597–1972. Dynamic Perspectives in Marriage and Caste, Politics and Religion. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.
Booth, A. (1977). Irrigation in Indonesia, part I. Bulletin of Indonesian Economic Studies 13(2): 33–74.
Bruns, B. (2004). From voice to empowerment: Rerouting irrigation reform in Indonesia. In Mollinga, P. P., and Bolding, A. (eds.), The Politics of Irrigation Reform. Contested Policy Formulation and Implementation in Asia, Africa and Latin America. Ashgate, Aldershot, pp. 145–165.
Bruns, B., and Meinzen-Dick, R. (eds.) (2000). Negotiating Water Rights. Intermediate Technology Publications/International Food Policy Research Institute, London.
Charras, M. (1982). De la Forêt Maléfique a l’Herbe Divine. La Transmigration en Indonésie: les Balinais a Sulawesi. Editions de la Maison des Sciences de l’Homme, Paris.
Davis, G. J. (1976). Parigi: a Social History of the Balinese movement to Central Sulawesi, 1907–1974. University Microfilm International, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA.
Falvo, D. J. (2000). On Modelling Balinese Water Temple Networks as Complex Adaptive Systems. Human Ecology 28(4): 641–649.
Geertz, C. (1972). The Wet and the Dry: Traditional Irrigation in Bali and Morocco. Human Ecology 1(1): 23–29.
Geertz, C. (1980). Organization of the Balinese Subak. In Coward Jr., E. W. (ed.), Irrigation and Agricultural Development in Asia. Perspectives from the Social Sciences. Cornell University Press, Ithaca and London, pp. 70–90.
Happé, P. L. E. (1935). Waterbeheer en Waterschappen. De Ingenieur in Nederlandsch-Indië 2 (11), VI: 135–140.
Horst, L. (1996). Intervention in irrigation water division in Bali, Indonesia. A case of farmers’ circumvention of modern technology. In Diemer, G., and Huibers, F. (eds.), Cropsm People and Irrigation. Water Allocation Practices of Farmers and Engineers. Intermediate Technology Publications, London, pp. 34–52.
Howe, L. (2006). Review article of Stephen Lansing: Perfect Order: Recognizing Complexity in Bali. Anthropological Quarterly 79(4): 777–782.
Korn, V. E. (1924). Het adatrecht van Bali. De Ster, ‘s Gravenhage.
Lansing, J. S. (1987). Balinese “Water Temples” and the Management of Irrigation. American Anthropologist 89: 326–341.
Lansing, J. S. (1991). Priests and Programmers. Technologies of Power in the Engineered Landscape of Bali. Princeton University Press, Princeton, New Jersey.
Liefrinck, S. A. (1969). Rice Cultivation in Northern Bali. In Swellengrebel, J. L. (ed.), Bali: Further Studies in Life, Thought, and Ritual. W. van Hoeve, The Hague, pp. 3–73.
Meinzen-Dick, R. S., and Pradhan, R. (2001). Implications of Legal Pluralism for Natural Resource Management. IDS Bulletin 32(4): 10–17.
Mollinga, P. P. (2003). On the Waterfront. Water Distribution, Technology and Agrarian Change in a South Indian Canal Irrigation System. Wageningen University Water Resources Series, Orient Longman, Hyderabad, India.
Oad, R. (2001). Policy Reforms for Sustainable Irrigation Management—a Case Study of Indonesia. Irrigation and Drainage 50: 279–294.
Roth, D. (2005). In the shadow of uniformity. Balinese irrigation management in a Public Works irrigation system in Luwu, South Sulawesi, Indonesia. In Roth, D., Boelens, R., and Zwarteveen, M. (eds.), Liquid Relations, Contested Water rights and Legal Complexity. Rutgers University Press, New Brunswick, pp. 66–96.
Roth, D. (2006). Which Order? Whose Order? Balinese Irrigation Management in Sulawesi, Indonesia. Oxford Development Studies 34(1): 33–46.
Schulte Nordholt, H. (1986). Bali: Colonial Conceptions and Political Change 1700–1940. From Shifting Hierarchies to ‘Fixed Order’. CASP, Rotterdam.
Schulte Nordholt, H. (1996). The Spell of Power. A History of Balinese Politics, 1650–1940. KITLV Press, Leiden.
Spiertz, H. L. J. (1991). The Transformation of Traditional Law: a Tale of People’s Participation in Irrigation Management on Bali. Landscape and Urban Planning 20: 189–196.
Spiertz, H. L. J. (2000). Water rights and legal pluralism: some basics of a legal anthropological approach. In Bruns, B. R., and Meinzen-Dick, R. S. (eds.), Negotiating Water Rights. International Food Policy Research Institute, New Delhi, pp. 245–268.
Sutawan, N. (1998). Peranan Subak di Era Reformasi. Dinamika Petani. Media Informasi tentang Sumberdaya Air dan Pertanian, Diterbitkan untuk Jaringan Komunikasi Irigasi Indonesia. No. 32, Tahun X.
Sutawan, N., Swara, M., Windia, W., Suteja, W., Arya, N., and Tjatera, W. (1990). Community-Based Irrigation Systems in Bali. In Gooneratne, W., and Hirashima, S. (eds.), Irrigation and Water Management in Asia. Sterling Publishers Private Limited, New Delhi/Bangalore, pp. 81–147.
Vermillion, D. L. (1986). Rules and Processes: Dividing Water and Negotiating Order in Two New Irrigation Systems in North Sulawesi, Indonesia, Ph.D. Thesis.
Vermillion, D. L. (2000). Water Rights in the state of nature: emergent expectations in an Indonesian settlement. In Bruns, B. R., and Meinzen-Dick, R. S. (eds.), Negotiating Water Rights. International Food Policy Research Institute, New Delhi, pp. 56–82.
Vincent, L. (2001). Struggles at the social interface: developing sociotechnical research in irrigation and water management. In Hebinck, P., and Verschoor, G. (eds.), Resonances and Dissonances in Development. Actors, Networks and Cultural Repertoires. van Gorcum, Assen, pp. 65–81.
von Benda-Beckmann, F., and von Benda-Beckmann, K. (2006). The Dynamics of Change and Continuity in Plural Legal Orders. Journal of Legal Pluralism and Unofficial Law 53–54: 1–44.
von Benda-Beckmann, F., von Benda-Beckmann, K., and Spiertz, J. (1996). Water rights and policy. In Spiertz, J., and Wiber, M. G. (eds.), The Role Of Law In Natural Resource Management. VUGA, ‘s, Gravenhage, pp. 77–99.
von Benda-Beckmann, F., von Benda-Beckmann, K., and Wiber, M. G. (2006). The properties of property. In von Benda-Beckmann, F., von Benda-Beckmann, K., and Wiber, M. G. (eds.), Changing Properties of Property. Berghahn Books, New York and Oxford, pp. 1–39.
