In 2006 and 2007, Pethikbumi (Pedagang Klithikan Mangkubumi), a group of street traders1 slated to be relocated to a newly renovated marketplace in Yogyakarta City, Indonesia, argued in government meetings and in the newspaper that the relocation plan was not clear (kurang jelas). The Kedaulatan Rakyat newspaper reported that 'the leader of Pethikbumi, Akbar, said the concept developed by the municipal government regarding the relocation was not transparent (tidak transparan), especially with money…. "I also have asked for a detailed relocation concept but I haven't been given it,' said Akbar."2 In the months leading up to the relocation deadline of November 2007, Pethikbumi publically critiqued the municipal government's lack of proper sosialisasi (socialization) regarding its plans to relocate hundreds of traders to a marketplace through letters to the government, newspaper articles and public and private meetings. Proposed by then-mayor of Yogyakarta City, Herry Zudianto, the klithikan (second-hand trader) relocation would move street vendors from three locations in the city to a renovated former animal marketplace, Kuncen. The traders would gain clear legal status and be empowered to develop their businesses.3 The new marketplace was also pegged to become a tourist attraction because it would bring together in one location a variety of traders selling secondhand and antique merchandise (Pethikbumi meeting, personal communication, January 16, 2006). With this plan, the municipal government of Yogyakarta intended to follow the example of the mayor of Solo (now governor of Jakarta), Joko Widodo, who had 'successfully' relocated klithikan traders in