Poverty Reduction through Local Wisdom(A Case Study from Buru Island-Maluku and Surade-West Java)
Author(s) -
Marcus J Pattinama
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
makara human behavior studies in asia
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2406-9183
pISSN - 2355-794X
DOI - 10.7454/mssh.v13i1.195
Subject(s) - poverty , context (archaeology) , basic needs , economic growth , socioeconomics , development economics , economics , geography , archaeology
Literature reviews on the concept of poverty and local observation on the field study were employed to investigate whothe poor are, in order to seek alternative policies according to specific local conditions to combat poverty, and to seelocal wisdom in a preventive effort to reduce poverty. Survey methodology, in-depth interviews and focus groupsdiscussions were used in this study. The findings suggest that the concept of poverty is multifacet. Both Bupolo peopleand Surade farmers cultivate small land. While Surade farmers are poor with no or limited land size and with relativelysmall scales' business, Bupolo people have relatively larger land size but have limited technology access, and lessaccess to social economic infrastructure, making them poor and only able to survive with food daily. The concept ofpoverty needs to be extended to include access to social economic infrastructure, remoteness, disempowerment,freedom of speech, and fairness in development. Poverty cannot be defined individually solely from the context of thecalorie fulfilment as a standard used by BPS. However, in principle, the concept of poverty cannot only be defined as arelative, but also dynamic concept. keywords: poverty, local wisdom, remoteness, small land, multifacet
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