364 research outputs found
The Politics of Indonesian Football
Freek Colombijn
Cet article retrace les grands traits de l'histoire du football indonésien pendant ce siècle. Le développement du football indonésien suit à un degré remarquable l'histoire récente de l'Indonésie. Les principaux points en sont : les intérêts financiers concernés, la rivalité entre associations de football nationalistes et hollandaises, les tentatives de modernisation du football par le gouvernement de l'Ordre Nouveau et les batailles rangées (entre camps adversaires qui changent selon les périodes).Colombijn Freek. The Politics of Indonesian Football. In: Archipel, volume 59, 2000. pp. 171-200
O lixo como uma problemática antropológica: Entrevista com Freek Colombijn
Resumo: Entrevista realizada com Dr. Freek Colombijn, antropólogo, professor e coordenador do Department of Social and Cultural Anthropology da Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam. Desde 2011 atua em parceria com Carmen Rial através do convênio firmado CAPES/NUFFIC, tendo, ambos, orientado mais de uma dezena de pesquisas com foco nas questões que circundam a temática do lixo. Nesta conversa, Colombijn aborda questões relativas a sua formação acadêmica, além das principais influências teóricas, parcerias com Brasil e o lugar da problemática dos resíduos nas seus trabalhos. Também nos fala um pouco da tradição antropológica holandesa, citando principais autores e linhas de pesquisa.Palavras-chave: Tradição Antropológica nos Países Baixos. Antropologia do Lixo. Freek Colombijn WASTE AS AN ANTHROPOLOGICAL ISSUE: INTERVIEW WITH FREEK COLOMBIJN Interview with Dr. Freek Colombijn, anthropologist, professor and Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam’s Department of Social and Cultural Anthropology coordinator. Since 2011 sustains a partnership with Carmen Rial throughout the CAPES/NUFFIC agreement, having, since then, conducted over a dozen researches focusing the thematic of waste. In this dialogue, Colombijn addresses the matters concerning his academic training, in addition to its main theoretical influences. He also tells us a little about the anthropological tradition of the Netherlands, exemplifying its principal authors and research lines.Keywords: Anthropological Tradition in the Netherlands. Waste Anthropology. Freek Colombij
Roots of violence in Indonesia : edited by Freek Colombijn, J. Thomas Lindblad
vi, 348 p.; 24 cm
Roots of violence in Indonesia : contemporary violence in historical perspective/ Edit.: Freek Colombijn
Ingrid Wessel & Georgia Wimhöfer, Violence in Indonesia ; Freek Colombijn & J. Thomas Lindblad, Roots of Violence in Indonesia ; Fauzan Al-Anshari, Saya Teroris? (Sebuah «Pleidoi»). E.S. Soepriyadi, Ngruki & Jaringan Terorisme. Melacak jejak Abu Bakar Ba 'asyir dan jaringannya dari Ngruki sampai bom Bali. Alip Purnomo, FPI Disalahpahami
Raillon François. Ingrid Wessel & Georgia Wimhöfer, Violence in Indonesia ; Freek Colombijn & J. Thomas Lindblad, Roots of Violence in Indonesia ; Fauzan Al-Anshari, Saya Teroris? (Sebuah «Pleidoi»). E.S. Soepriyadi, Ngruki & Jaringan Terorisme. Melacak jejak Abu Bakar Ba 'asyir dan jaringannya dari Ngruki sampai bom Bali. Alip Purnomo, FPI Disalahpahami. In: Archipel, volume 67, 2004. pp. 236-246
Local conflict and development projects in Indonesia : part of the problem or part of a solution ?
Drawing on an integrated mixed methods research design, the authors explore the dynamics of the development-conflict nexus in rural Indonesia, and the specific role of development projects in shaping the nature, extent, and trajectories of"everyday"conflicts. They find that projects that give inadequate attention to dispute resolution mechanisms in many cases stimulate local conflict, either through the injection of development resources themselves or less directly by exacerbating preexisting tensions in target communities. But projects that have explicit and accessible procedures for managing disputes arising from the development process are much less likely to lead to violent outcomes. The authors argue that such projects are more successful in addressing project-related conflicts because they establish direct procedures (such as forums, facilitators, and complaints mechanisms) for dealing with tensions as they arise. These direct mechanisms are less successful in addressing broader social tensions elicited by, or external to, the development process, though program mechanisms can ameliorate conflict indirectly through changing norms and networks of interaction.Post Conflict Reintegration,Development Economics&Aid Effectiveness,Education and Society,Rural Poverty Reduction,Population Policies
Colonial heritage as bricolage:Interpreting the colonial built environment in Surabaya, Indonesia
One of the most visible and enduring vestiges of colonialism is its buildings. In this article I address the question of how current approving references to the colonial buildings in Indonesia should be explained, looking at one particular city, Surabaya. The cheerful, innovative adoption of colonial themes defies an analysis in terms of 'imperial debris'. I propose to borrow the term 'bricolage' from Claude Lévi-Strauss to describe this process in which people make new associations between selected colonial buildings and their own present lives. Bricolage is the selective conceptual appropriation of the colonial buildings for whatever objective the user finds convenient: objects to boost city marketing, a company advertisement, stops on a heritage tour, amusing backdrops for pictures and selfies, a counterpoint to a consumerist lifestyle in shopping malls. For colonial building enthusiasts, the love of colonial design and old urban quarters is more than a matter of the aesthetics of urban spaces, but also, indirectly, a critique of the transformation of modern cities by short-sighted real-estate developers and city administrators, who demolish irreplaceable buildings in acts of 'architectural suicide'.</p
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