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Informationen zum Autor Michael R. Dove, Percy E. Sajise, and Amity A. Doolittle, eds. Zusammenfassung Scholars rethink the translation of environmental concepts between East and West! particularly ideas of nature and culture; what conservation might mean; and how conservation policy is applied and transformed in the everyday landscapes of Southeast Asia. Inhaltsverzeichnis About the Series vii Acknowledgments ix Preface xi Introduction: Changing Ways of Thinking about the Relations between Society and Environment / Michael R. Dove, Percy E. Sajise, and Amity A. Doolittle 1 Section I. The Boundary Between Natural and Social Reproduction 1. The Wild and the Tame in Protected Areas Management in Peninsular Malaysia / Lye Tuck-Po 37 2. The Implications of Plantation Agriculture for Biodiversity in Peninsular Malaysia: A Historical Analysis / Jeyamalar Kathirithamby-Wells 62 3. Rubber Kills the Land and Saves the Community: An Undisciplined Commodity / Michael R. Dove 91 Section II. Community Rights Discourses through Time 4. Adat Argument and Discursive Power: Land Tenure Struggles in Krui, Indonesia / Upik Djalins 123 5. Redefining Native Customary Law: Struggles over Property Rights between Native Peoples and Colonial Rulers in Sabah, Malaysia, 1950–1996 / Amity A. Doolittle 151 6. The Social Life of Boundaries: Competing Territorial Claims and Conservation Planning in the Danau Sentarum Wildlife Reserve, West Kalimantan, Indonesia / Emily E. Harwell 180 7. Interpreting "Indigenous Peoples and Sustainable Resource Use": The Case of the T'Boli in the Southern Philippines / Levita Duhaylungsod 216 Section III. Reconstructing and Representing Indigenous Environmental Knowledge 8. The Historical Demography of Resource Use in a Swidden Community in West Kalimantan / Endah Sulistyawati 239 9. The Ecological Implications of Central versus Local Governance: The Contest over Integrated Pest Management in Indonesia / Yunita T. Winarto 276 Bibliography 303 Contributors 351 Index 355 ...