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Does the sea divide or unite Indonesians? Ethnicity and regionalism from a maritime perspective: WORKING PAPER

data.gov.au
Crawford School of Public Policy (CSPP), The Australian National University (ANU) (Owned by)
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ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Adc&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2FANDS&rft_id=http://data.gov.au/data/dataset/e0a5c332-7c22-4100-b601-c383242d699c&rft.title=Does the sea divide or unite Indonesians? Ethnicity and regionalism from a maritime perspective: WORKING PAPER&rft.identifier=does-the-sea-divide-or-unite-indonesians-ethnicity-and-regionalism-from-a-maritime-perspective-&rft.publisher=data.gov.au&rft.description=Link to working paper download site - http://gcmd.nasa.gov/Resources/valids/keyword_list.html - http://www.marine.csiro.au/csquares/index.html - This record describes, and links to a working paper produced through the Resource Management in Asia-Pacific (RMAP) Program based at The Australian National University in Canberra.\n*****\nThe Indonesian Government argues that the sea bridges the many islands and different peoples of Indonesia. Politically, this might be appropriate as a means of encouraging people to think that wherever and whoever there are, they are united as Indonesians. However, when this ideology is used for maritime resource management, it creates problems. One issue derives from the fact that people do not think that the Indonesian sea is 'free for all' Indonesians. I will argue that people, however vaguely, talk about 'we' and 'they' in defining who has the right to a particular fishing ground and who should be excluded. By analyzing conflicts that have taken part in different places in Indonesia, I will demonstrate that ethnicity and regionalism have been used as the defining factor of 'We' and 'They.' In particular contexts, ethnicity and regionalism define whether fishermen can access marine resources. Thus, at the practical level the sea does not unite Indonesians, and it is in fact, ethnicity and regionalism that divides the Indonesian seas.&rft.creator=Crawford School of Public Policy (CSPP), The Australian National University (ANU)&rft.date=2023&rft.coverage=100.0,-12.0 141.0,-12.0 141.0,2.0 100.0,2.0 100.0,-12.0&rft.coverage=100.0,-12.0 141.0,-12.0 141.0,2.0 100.0,2.0 100.0,-12.0&rft.coverage=true&rft_rights=Other&rft_subject=Ethnicity&rft_subject=Fishermen&rft_subject=Human Dimensions&rft_subject=Indonesian Seas&rft_subject=Marine Fisheries&rft_subject=Marine Territory&rft_subject=Maritime Resource Management&rft_subject=Regionalism&rft_subject=Social Behavior&rft.type=dataset&rft.language=English Access the data

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This record describes, and links to a working paper produced through the Resource Management in Asia-Pacific (RMAP) Program based at The Australian National University in Canberra.
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The Indonesian Government argues that the sea bridges the many islands and different peoples of Indonesia. Politically, this might be appropriate as a means of encouraging people to think that wherever and whoever there are, they are united as Indonesians. However, when this ideology is used for maritime resource management, it creates problems. One issue derives from the fact that people do not think that the Indonesian sea is 'free for all' Indonesians. I will argue that people, however vaguely, talk about 'we' and 'they' in defining who has the right to a particular fishing ground and who should be excluded. By analyzing conflicts that have taken part in different places in Indonesia, I will demonstrate that ethnicity and regionalism have been used as the defining factor of 'We' and 'They.' In particular contexts, ethnicity and regionalism define whether fishermen can access marine resources. Thus, at the practical level the sea does not unite Indonesians, and it is in fact, ethnicity and regionalism that divides the Indonesian seas.

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Link to working paper download site -
http://gcmd.nasa.gov/Resources/valids/keyword_list.html -
http://www.marine.csiro.au/csquares/index.html -

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100,-12 141,-12 141,2 100,2 100,-12

120.5,-5

100,-12 141,-12 141,2 100,2 100,-12

120.5,-5

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