The return of the muro: Institutional bricolage, customary institutions, and protection of the commons in Lembata Island, Nusa Tenggara

The Lembata region is known for complex environmental conflicts between local institutions and external interests to protect endangered species such as the dugong and sperm whale. In this paper, we examine how the Tokajaeng community applies traditional rules (muro) in the face of environmental thre...

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Published in:Forest and Society
Main Authors: Nurhady Sirimorok, Asfriyanto Asfriyanto
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Hasanuddin University 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.24259/fs.v4i1.7676
https://doaj.org/article/ea0a537e0cee4b3da3887fa18634831e
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spelling fttriple:oai:gotriple.eu:oai:doaj.org/article:ea0a537e0cee4b3da3887fa18634831e 2023-05-15T18:26:51+02:00 The return of the muro: Institutional bricolage, customary institutions, and protection of the commons in Lembata Island, Nusa Tenggara Nurhady Sirimorok Asfriyanto Asfriyanto 2020-04-01 https://doi.org/10.24259/fs.v4i1.7676 https://doaj.org/article/ea0a537e0cee4b3da3887fa18634831e en eng Hasanuddin University doi:10.24259/fs.v4i1.7676 2549-4724 2549-4333 https://doaj.org/article/ea0a537e0cee4b3da3887fa18634831e undefined Forest and Society, Vol 4, Iss 1 (2020) institutional arrangement commons customary institution conservation muro Lembata envir hist Journal Article https://vocabularies.coar-repositories.org/resource_types/c_6501/ 2020 fttriple https://doi.org/10.24259/fs.v4i1.7676 2023-01-22T18:03:51Z The Lembata region is known for complex environmental conflicts between local institutions and external interests to protect endangered species such as the dugong and sperm whale. In this paper, we examine how the Tokajaeng community applies traditional rules (muro) in the face of environmental threats to the commons, such as depletion of forests and mangroves, and degradation of coral reefs. Critical Institutional Analysis is applied to examine institutional arrangements governing the commons. The approach acknowledges the complexity of institutions entwined in everyday social life, power relations that animate them, their socio-historical formation, and interplay between formal and informal institutions, as well as the convergence between modern and traditional arrangements. Fieldwork involved in-depth investigation on how the Tokajaengs create and applied rules (muro) and how they actively participated in the process of establishing new rules. We find that the muro responds reflexively to both internal and external dynamics in protecting the commons. They at once adapt to changes that threaten the commons in a way that each new threat corresponds with a new rule. Therefore, although the muro is a longstanding institution for local conservation, once suppressed for almost three decades during the New Order era, new arrangements have emerged since 2005 following political reforms in Indonesia. In the context of state efforts applying top-down conservation instruments, the muro shows the value of local institutional authority rooted in local belief systems that can take on new shapes through adaptive mechanisms. The muro therefore offers new opportunities for rethinking conservation in the Wallacea region, in ways that can actively engage local authority to devise and enforce rules to protect the environment. Article in Journal/Newspaper Sperm whale Unknown Forest and Society 4 1 61
institution Open Polar
collection Unknown
op_collection_id fttriple
language English
topic institutional arrangement
commons
customary institution
conservation
muro
Lembata
envir
hist
spellingShingle institutional arrangement
commons
customary institution
conservation
muro
Lembata
envir
hist
Nurhady Sirimorok
Asfriyanto Asfriyanto
The return of the muro: Institutional bricolage, customary institutions, and protection of the commons in Lembata Island, Nusa Tenggara
topic_facet institutional arrangement
commons
customary institution
conservation
muro
Lembata
envir
hist
description The Lembata region is known for complex environmental conflicts between local institutions and external interests to protect endangered species such as the dugong and sperm whale. In this paper, we examine how the Tokajaeng community applies traditional rules (muro) in the face of environmental threats to the commons, such as depletion of forests and mangroves, and degradation of coral reefs. Critical Institutional Analysis is applied to examine institutional arrangements governing the commons. The approach acknowledges the complexity of institutions entwined in everyday social life, power relations that animate them, their socio-historical formation, and interplay between formal and informal institutions, as well as the convergence between modern and traditional arrangements. Fieldwork involved in-depth investigation on how the Tokajaengs create and applied rules (muro) and how they actively participated in the process of establishing new rules. We find that the muro responds reflexively to both internal and external dynamics in protecting the commons. They at once adapt to changes that threaten the commons in a way that each new threat corresponds with a new rule. Therefore, although the muro is a longstanding institution for local conservation, once suppressed for almost three decades during the New Order era, new arrangements have emerged since 2005 following political reforms in Indonesia. In the context of state efforts applying top-down conservation instruments, the muro shows the value of local institutional authority rooted in local belief systems that can take on new shapes through adaptive mechanisms. The muro therefore offers new opportunities for rethinking conservation in the Wallacea region, in ways that can actively engage local authority to devise and enforce rules to protect the environment.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Nurhady Sirimorok
Asfriyanto Asfriyanto
author_facet Nurhady Sirimorok
Asfriyanto Asfriyanto
author_sort Nurhady Sirimorok
title The return of the muro: Institutional bricolage, customary institutions, and protection of the commons in Lembata Island, Nusa Tenggara
title_short The return of the muro: Institutional bricolage, customary institutions, and protection of the commons in Lembata Island, Nusa Tenggara
title_full The return of the muro: Institutional bricolage, customary institutions, and protection of the commons in Lembata Island, Nusa Tenggara
title_fullStr The return of the muro: Institutional bricolage, customary institutions, and protection of the commons in Lembata Island, Nusa Tenggara
title_full_unstemmed The return of the muro: Institutional bricolage, customary institutions, and protection of the commons in Lembata Island, Nusa Tenggara
title_sort return of the muro: institutional bricolage, customary institutions, and protection of the commons in lembata island, nusa tenggara
publisher Hasanuddin University
publishDate 2020
url https://doi.org/10.24259/fs.v4i1.7676
https://doaj.org/article/ea0a537e0cee4b3da3887fa18634831e
genre Sperm whale
genre_facet Sperm whale
op_source Forest and Society, Vol 4, Iss 1 (2020)
op_relation doi:10.24259/fs.v4i1.7676
2549-4724
2549-4333
https://doaj.org/article/ea0a537e0cee4b3da3887fa18634831e
op_rights undefined
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