Abstract

With large tracts of forested land planned for, or already converted to, industrial palm oil concessions, there is a need to better understand the gendered implications for, and responses by, communities affected by such landscape change. This paper examines the differentiated gendered responses and livelihood strategies of Dayak Modang women and men in a hamlet in East Kalimantan, Indonesia, surrounded by industrial palm oil plantations. Informed by feminist political ecology, we investigate how the compounding impact of industrial oil palm – the basis and outcome of enclavement – curtails livelihood options and reinforces gender differentiation in terms of access to and use of customary resources. Gendered inequalities and food insecurity dynamics emerge as a result. We show how, however, that despite gendered exclusions, Dayak Modang women use their own knowledge and practices to diversify livelihoods to negotiate emerging constraints over resource access and use. Our paper demonstrates that ways in which Dayak women ‘sustain livelihoods’ reflects forms of everyday negotiations and resistance to intensifying constraints over life and livelihood.

Highlights

  • Ibu Margareta, a middle-aged Dayak Modang woman of the Hongoi hamlet,1 is almost always in motion: weeding her swidden plot, clearing brush from her cocoa grove, foraging mushrooms and leafy vegetables, fishing

  • We suggest that acts of sustaining livelihoods reflect the ‘everyday politics of resistance [that involve]...adjusting and contesting norms and rules regarding authority over, production of, or allocation of resources... in quiet, mundane and subtle expressions and acts...’ (Kerkvliet, 2009: 232)

  • We argue that sustaining livelihoods through diversification strategies reflect everyday politics of resistance in how they manifest in local farmers’ desires to remain autonomous and maintain the cultural, subsistence and financial basis of their livelihoods

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Summary

Introduction

Ibu Margareta, a middle-aged Dayak Modang woman of the Hongoi hamlet, is almost always in motion: weeding her swidden plot, clearing brush from her cocoa grove, foraging mushrooms and leafy vegetables, fishing. For Margareta, these qualities underline the value of the gardens and remaining forest area around the hamlet and demonstrate why retaining land still matters. She contrasts this with the impacts brought by palm oil: There’s more land conflicts – the initial land rights are not acknowledged. Despite Modang efforts to prevent forest clearing through protests, seizing land clearing machinery, issuing adat fines, and pursuing formal. While some were optimistic that plantations would bring new wealth, the costs to lives and livelihoods outweigh the benefits

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