Abstract

Thirteen years ago, PAYOPAYO Peasant School Network, an Indonesian community organizing network based in Sulawesi, facilitated Participatory Action Research (PAR) that eventually culminated in a creation of a common resource management regime around an irrigation system for agricultural use in Tompobulu, a village within a national park in upland South Sulawesi. This note from the field presents a reflection on collective action experiences of a community in building the commons in 2008 to 2009, and revisits the extent to which the commons has been managed, how management regimes changed over time, and how it survives as a commons today. The initial factors allowing for establishment of the commons, understood here as a social practice toward common goals, were a shared need for water (local needs & conditions), and the success to make use of the irrigation commons as a means to initiate other collective actions. Drawing from concerted engagement and analysis conducted in 2021, this note revisits the key factors and highlights different ways the commons continues to persist, namely due to the distinct benefits felt by participants, the existence of institutions that regulate the use and maintenance of the commons, the existence of a monitoring system among members, participation of members in formulating and modifying the rules, and the recognition of National Park authorities on the commons and its rules.

Highlights

  • In mid-June 2021, I visited Tompobulu, which is administratively located in the Regency (Kabupaten) of Pangkep, South Sulawesi

  • I explained my interest in better understanding about the longstanding irrigation initiatives, and the extent to which it continued to support the essential infrastructure for village livelihoods. From this visit I learned that there are at least four aspects that prove that the irrigation system can be seen as continuing the commons after 13 years

  • We considered that the project will eventually face the National Park, it would need some older farmers to negotiate with both other farmers and the National Park

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Summary

Revisiting Tompobulu

In mid-June 2021, I (first author) visited Tompobulu, which is administratively located in the Regency (Kabupaten) of Pangkep, South Sulawesi. I wanted to be a rural organizer, and my organization was starting to be seriously working in villages, and we need a kind of social laboratory in a village and a member to run it This time I exclusively came to better understand the irrigation system that local farmers built at that time. I explained my interest in better understanding about the longstanding irrigation initiatives, and the extent to which it continued to support the essential infrastructure for village livelihoods From this visit I learned that there are at least four aspects that prove that the irrigation system can be seen as continuing the commons after 13 years. Higher authorities such as the village government and National Park acknowledge and respect the water user group as well as the rules they have devised

Tompobulu: the village inside the National Park
Findings
Collective action in building irrigation
Full Text
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