Abstract

Indigenous people have deep local knowledge of environmental sustainability and natural resource utilization, which are sources of innovations that often are drivers for economic growth in rural areas. This study explores the knowledge structure of indigenous innovation in village enterprises through content analysis of research publications. The resulting knowledge structure can be used to set up a roadmap for the studies on village enterprise and in a broader context to build metadata as a foundation for an evaluation system of village enterprise. The authors deploy topic modeling and co-word analyses to scrutinize 775 village enterprise research articles from the Scopus database and 665 paper from ScienceDirect. In the topic modeling, topic models village enterprises are setup. The topics found are local ownership (such as market and property), land, services (housing, health care), economy and public policy, financial service micro-credit, environmental pollution control, local business sustainability, social entrepreneurship, and household income, bioenergy based electrification, and bumdes management. Four sectors of the natural resource-based indigenous economy were identified: traditional food production, bio-energy for fuel and electricity, agriculture, and tourism. The topic models are used to comprehend knowledge structure in the village enterprises, whereby the focus is to uncover the context of indigenous village enterprise and its states of the art.

Highlights

  • The distribution of indigenous people around the world is quite significant

  • The optimal searched values of the perplexity were selected at three points, namely, the topic model with topic sizes 15, 30 and 60. These three topic models are supported by results from the coherence values calculation which are used as a basis for interpreting the knowledge structure on village enterprise

  • Electrification from Renewable Energy - C35. This finding reflects that there are responses from the indigenous people for their resilient livelihood against their vulnerability related to climate change by preserving natural resources and landscape and forest conservation

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Summary

Introduction

The distribution of indigenous people around the world is quite significant They occupy about 22% of the earth’s surface (ILO, 2017), comprising less than 5% of the world’s population, and protect 80% of global biodiversity (Gleb Raygorodetsky, 2018). These community groups’ rights are often marginalized. Indigenous people have deep local knowledge related to environmental sustainability and natural resources called indigenous knowledge (Capel, 2014). These indigenous knowledge supported with technology are sources of innovations that often are drivers for economic growth in rural areas. The issues on village enterprise are increasingly important, especially for Indonesia, whereby a lot of money massively has been allocated for village funds in the last

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