2016
DOI: 10.15294/komunitas.v8i2.5856
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Local Ecological Knowledge on Forest Clearing: A Case Study of Parak and Rimbo Practices in Simancuang Community, Indonesia

Abstract: Local communities are frequently judged as the main driver of forest degradation and deforestation because of the weak recognition to local ecological knowledge (LEK) or traditional ecological knowledge (TEK). We assessed that it is important to elaborate the attributes of LEK and TEK as a way to describe why and how the local community clears the forest, as well as its relation to local practices, named parak and rimbo. Our research uses case study method to describe the local practices in Simancuang communit… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…Consequently, government officers perceived that all illegal activities in the state forest are forestry crimes and violations. Meanwhile, local communities claimed that the state forest is their communal land in accordance with Minangkabau adat law, as applied in Koto Malintang and Simancuang villages (Asmin et al, 2016;Asmin et al, 2017a). In every governmental coordination meeting, implementing the SF schemes is also intended to legalize the socio-economic activities of local communities, previously considered illegal.…”
Section: The Support For Social Forestry Schemesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Consequently, government officers perceived that all illegal activities in the state forest are forestry crimes and violations. Meanwhile, local communities claimed that the state forest is their communal land in accordance with Minangkabau adat law, as applied in Koto Malintang and Simancuang villages (Asmin et al, 2016;Asmin et al, 2017a). In every governmental coordination meeting, implementing the SF schemes is also intended to legalize the socio-economic activities of local communities, previously considered illegal.…”
Section: The Support For Social Forestry Schemesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, the initiation of SF schemes does not necessarily cover the entire community management area. In Simancuang, the community only proposed certain protected forest areas, while other protected forest areas were not included (see Asmin et al, 2016). Even in Koto Malintang, the community did not agree to any schemes in accordance with government regulations because they believed that their adat system could maintain their natural resources (see Asmin et al, 2017a).…”
Section: Rationale For Cbfm Development In West Sumatramentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The large population of Indonesia is a significant market opportunity for industry players. This is indicated by the 30 million Indonesian population who are consumers and e-commerce players [1]. Economic progress is one of the development goals representing society's welfare.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%