“…The absence of straightforwardness brought about by restricted information and data in regards to land control and proprietorship, as well as the absence of straightforwardness of data accessible locally, is one of the reasons for the underlying development of land debates. [3] Land ownership in Indonesia itself, if traced from its history, can be divided into two periods, namely land ownership before and after the promulgation of the Basic Agrarian Law (UUPA). Land ownership in the period before the promulgation of the UUPA gave rise to a legal dualism governing land in Indonesia, on the one hand, Dutch colonial land law applied or adhered to the Western Civil Law system, and on the one hand, the Customary Law system also applied which applies to native people who do not have written evidence, which is often called customary land or ulayat land.…”