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Musjawarah in Karo-Land
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 July 2024
Extract
In this essay, I propose to pay attention to Karo-Batak dispute settlement in the framework of regional manifestations of musjawarah, the Indonesian way of popular decision-making. To that end, I shall begin with a brief description of the Karo categories of kinship and affinity, followed by an exposé of the Karo institution of dispute settlement, called runggun adat as well as by the description of a specific case which I recorded in 1969, almost thirty years after it occurred.
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- Research Article
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- Copyright
- Copyright © The Law and Society Association, 1973.
Footnotes
AUTHOR'S NOTE: The field research (May, June, 1969) was made possible by a grant from the Netherlands Foundation for the Advancement of Tropical Research (WOTRO) in the Hague. Prof. M. A. Jaspan of the University of Hull fathered the plan and introduced me locally. R.I.M. Perangin-angin, chairman of the State Court at Kabandjahe provided me with continuous counsel and help; Terbit Sembiring, M.A., of Pantjur Batu was my indispensable daily companion and assistant/interpreter; Dr. Masri Singarimbun kindly facilitated accommodation for my wife and myself and made available to me a copy of his doctoral thesis at Australian National University, Canberra (1965), a very important guide through the maze of Karo kinship and affinity. Prof. A.A. Trouwborst of Nijmegen University kindly read and commented on the draft of the present essay.
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