| Literature DB >> 29681678 |
Abstract
This case study analyses a ban on the use of fire in a district of West-Kalimantan in response to the 2015 Southeast Asian Haze crisis. Based on stakeholder interviews and participant observation, I address the dilemmas encountered at the district and village level as a result of transnational environmental politics. A stark example of a wider tendency for policies to restrict swidden agriculture, the case study provides insight into the persistence of swidden. Contradictions between different stakeholders' experiences and understandings of local human ecology and haze politics ultimately rendered the ban ineffective. Future efforts at regulating fire in smallholder agriculture would therefore benefit from a clearer understanding of the relationships between fire, subsistence, and haze.Entities:
Keywords: Political Ecology; Southeast Asian Haze crisis; Swidden agriculture; West Kalimantan, Environmental Policy
Year: 2018 PMID: 29681678 PMCID: PMC5906483 DOI: 10.1007/s10745-018-9969-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Ecol Interdiscip J ISSN: 0300-7839
Overview of positions and interpretations regarding the ban
| Formal stance | Immediate necessity of fire for subsistence | Swidden responsible for haze? | Legal status of burning swidden | Explanation of the ban | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| District government | Opposed | Yes | No | [not discussed] | Political |
| Police | Supportive | Yes | Yes | Illegal | Political |
| Indigenous rights NGO | Opposed | Yes | No | Legal | Political |
| Environmental NGO | Opposed | Yes | Yes | Illegal | Political |
| Village government | Supportive | Yes | No | Illegal | Political |
| Villagers | Opposed | Yes | No | Legal | Political |
Possible responses to the ban as mentioned in discussions. The subsistence ethic moved villagers away from the left column, and tactics of non-confrontational obedience allowed villagers to stay away from the right column
| Obedience | “Ways Out” | Conflict |
|---|---|---|
| Protest in district capital once food runs out. | Coordinate to prevent simultaneous fires | Fighting risks getting hurt |
| Choose remote locations | ||
| Choose untitled land | ||
| Use young and small fallows for quicker and smaller fires | ||
| Eat for free in jail (bring pets and family) | ||
| Burn after jail is full | ||
| Burn while the Iban fight the police | ||
| Rely on reputation of aggression to keep the police out | ||
| Negotiate with the police |