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Regulating the Terminal Economy: Difference, disruption, and governance in a Papuan commercial hub
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 March 2019
Abstract
What kinds of governance agendas emerge at frontiers of commercial expansion, where routine economic relations traverse differences of ethnicity and degrees of formality? In the Balim Valley in the highlands of Indonesia's easternmost Papua province, mobilities and trade intersect at adjoining peri-urban markets and minivan terminals. The ‘terminal economy’ at the edges of Wamena, the region's bustling hub, is a threshold between rural and urban life, where indigenous livelihoods are subordinated to Indonesia's expanding commercial networks. Here, a cosmopolitan population—including indigenous Papuan highlanders and newcomer merchants from distant Indonesian regions—gathers to buy and sell local horticultural produce and imported commodities, transit between modes of transportation, and engage in a variety of formal and informal economic activities. This article traces the emergence of a multifaceted commercial regulation agenda, in the wake of demands for the recognition of indigenous contributions to the regional economy. It considers recent indigenous-formulated regulation policies in the context of the region's commercial history, one that is marked by a colonial devaluation of indigenous economic life and, more recently, by uprisings, inter-ethnic tensions, and government attempts to control and contain informal vending. The article conceptualizes commercial regulation as a convergence between efforts to contain disruption and demands for the revaluation of marginalized economic practices. It argues that commercial regulation is especially salient in regions that have been relegated to an end-point position in national and global commodity distribution paths.
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- Research Article
- Information
- Modern Asian Studies , Volume 53 , Special Issue 3: Marginal Hubs: Conviviality Beyond the Urban Centre in Asia , May 2019 , pp. 904 - 942
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- Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2019
Footnotes
I thank Madeleine Reeves, Magnus Marsden, and Norbert Peabody for their feedback and assistance, as well as the three anonymous reviewers for their comments. Fieldwork for this research was carried out with support from the International Development Research Centre, the Fonds de Recherche du Québec—Société et Culture, and the Lorna Marshall Doctoral Fellowship of the Department of Anthropology, University of Toronto.
References
1 All translated terms are from Indonesian (either Standard or Papuan Colloquial), unless otherwise noted.
2 WEOP was a collaboration involving Wamena-based NGOs and researchers from the Department of Anthropology at Universitas Cenderawasih in Jayapura, Papua. WEOP members worked as research assistants and as participants in and facilitators of focus groups discussions. I also draw on material I collected during 18 months of ethnographic fieldwork in and around Wamena from 2012 and 2014, and previous visits dating back to 2007.
3 While much English-language literature on Indonesia translates kabupaten as ‘district’, I use ‘regency’ instead, reserving ‘district’ for the next (lower) level, kecamatan (often called distrik in Papua).
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27 Economic geographers have identified this type of marketing system as ‘dendritic’, marked by hierarchical, linear connections linking commercial nodes, on a spectrum from more central to more marginal. See Augustus, Edgar Johnson, Jerome, The Organization of Space in Developing Countries (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1970)Google Scholar in Smith, Carol A., ‘Economics of Marketing Systems: Models from Economic Geography’, Annual Review of Anthropology 3 (1974), pp. 177–79CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Dendritic systems are typical of regions with a recent (or ‘late’) colonial history.
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34 This explanation has been presented regarding reports of toxic tofu sold at markets in various towns in Java and Sumatra, reported in 2005 and 2006, and then again in 2011. Otniel Tamindael, ‘Formaldehyde-Laced Foods Reemerge in Indonesian Markets’, Antaranews.com, http://www.antaranews.com/en/news/74626/formaldehyde-laced-foods-reemerge, [accessed 19 December 2018].
35 True or false, this accusation echoes actual global commercial practices, such as large pharmaceutical companies’ earmarking of lower-quality batches for sale to countries in the global South.
36 The power of such circulating messages drew on a history of rumour as an important way for Papuans to share knowledge about their disempowerment. Butt, Leslie, ‘“Lipstick Girls” and “Fallen Women”: AIDS and Conspiratorial Thinking in Papua, Indonesia’, Cultural Anthropology 20, no. 3 (1 August 2005), pp. 412–42CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Kirsch, Stuart, ‘Rumour and Other Narratives of Political Violence in West Papua’, Critique of Anthropology 22, no. 1 (1 March 2002), pp. 53–79CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
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38 Koalisi LSM untuk Perlindungan dan Penegakan HAM di Papua, ‘Laporan Awal: Kasus Wamena’ (Jayapura: SKP Jayapura, ELSHAM Papua, Kontras Papua, ALDP, Koalisi Perempuan Papua, Elsam Jakarta, PBHI Jakarta, 6 May 2003); Upton, ‘The Impact of Migration’.
39 Population statistics show no permanent decrease in the migrant population in Wamena, leading one researcher to conclude that most of the non-indigenous population soon returned to the region and that this was a temporary dip in in-migration. Upton, ‘The Impact of Migration’.
40 By interpreting Autonomy as a government response I do not mean to diminish the role of Papuan representatives in the negotiations that produced it. Indeed, the mass movement in the Balim and elsewhere in Papua pressured Jakarta to engage in negotiations. King, Peter, West Papua and Indonesia since Suharto: Independence, Autonomy or Chaos? (Sydney: University of New South Wales Press, 2004)Google Scholar.
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48 A vendor encountering this transportation obstacle could still choose to sell goods at either Wouma or Sinakma markets, located closer to the town core. As these markets serve respective hinterland catchment areas, access to vending space is not automatic, whereas Jibama is understood to serve the entire Balim region.
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52 Islami Adisubrata, ‘Habiskan Dana 34 Miliar Lebih, Pasar Tradisional Potikelek Akhirnya Diresmikan [Using up over 34 Billion in Funds, Potikelek Traditional Market Finally Unveiled]’, JUBI, Jujur Bicara Papua, 24 February 2015, http://tabloidjubi.com/16/2015/02/24/habiskan-dana-34-miliar-lebih-pasar-tradisional-potikelek-akhirnya-diresmikan/, [accessed 19 December 2018].
53 Ibid. (Translation by the author.)
54 Gandolfo, ‘Formless’.
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59 Collins, The Politics of Value.
60 Gandolfo, ‘Formless’.
61 See, for example, Dove, ‘Rice-Eating Rubber’.
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