Hostname: page-component-7479d7b7d-rvbq7 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-15T13:34:41.289Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Understanding the Nature of Rural Change: The Benefits of Migration and the (Re)creation of Precarity for Men and Women in Rural Central Java, Indonesia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 March 2019

Gerben Nooteboom*
Affiliation:
Department of Anthropology, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands; G.Nooteboom@uva.nl

Abstract

During the last two decades, rural-urban migration and government programs have improved livelihood conditions in Javanese villages and brought down levels of poverty considerably. This article, based on two extended surveys in nine villages in Central Java, aims to understand the nature of change in rural Java by focusing on gender and precarity. As a result of migration, old forms of precarity have not completely disappeared: Families without children, elderly and people unable to work continue to live precarious lives. For those who work in the cities, dependence on single-source, low incomes, predominantly earned by men who work in construction, continues to keep families and especially women vulnerable for livelihood shocks and stresses. Increasingly, women from poor families work in low-paid agricultural jobs or keep the family farm running.

Migration to the cities makes it possible for many families to stay in the village and live the ‘good’ village life. The village is generally perceived, socially and ideologically, as a ‘better’ place. The flip-side of this preference is a reproduction of traditional family values and limited room to maneuver for women. Very few interesting and suitable jobs for educated women exist in rural areas. Women from poorer families need to work in agriculture. Their dependence on working men with single sources of income, continues the risk to end up or fall back into living precarious lives.

Type
Article
Copyright
Copyright © Institute for East Asian Studies, Sogang University 2019 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Breman, Jan. 1987. Koelies, Planters en Koloniale Politiek: Het Arbeidsregime op de Grootlandbouwondernemingen aan Sumatra's Oostkust in het Begin van de Twintigste Eeuw. Dordrecht: Foris Publications.Google Scholar
Breman, Jan. 1995. “Work and life of the rural proletariat in Java's coastal plain.” Modern Asian Studies 29(1): 144.Google Scholar
Breman, Jan. 1996. Footloose Labour: Working in India's Informal Sector. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Chan, Carol. 2018. In Sickness and in Wealth: Migration, Gendered Morality, and Central Java. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.Google Scholar
Cornwall, Andrea, and Karen, Brock. 2005. “What do buzzwords do for development policy? A critical look at ‘participation’, ‘empowerment’ and ‘poverty reduction.’Third World Quarterly 26(7): 10431060. doi:10.2307/4017803.Google Scholar
Delgado-Wise, Raúl, and Henry, Veltmeyer. 2016. Agrarian Change, Migration and Development. Black Point, Canada: Fernwood Publishing.Google Scholar
De Janvry, Alain, and Elisabeth, Sadoulet. 2000. “Rural poverty in Latin America: Determinants and exit paths.” Food Policy 25(4): 389409.Google Scholar
Eberle, Meghan L., and Ian, Holliday. 2011. “Precarity and political immobilisation: Migrants from Burma in Chiang Mai, Thailand.” Journal of Contemporary Asia 41(3): 371392.Google Scholar
Gartaula, Hom Nath, Niehof, Anke, and Leontine, Visser. 2011. “Feminisation of agriculture as an effect of male out-migration: Unexpected outcomes from Jhapa District, Eastern Nepal.” International Journal of Interdisciplinary Social Sciences 5(2): 565577.Google Scholar
Geertz, Clifford. 1963. Agricultural Involution: The Process of Ecological Change in Indonesia. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Hart, Gillian, Andrew, Turton, and Ben, White. 1989. Agrarian Transformations: Local Processes and the State in Southeast Asia. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Hüsken, Frans. 1989. Een Dorp Op Java: Sociale Differentiatie in Een Boerengemeenschap, 1850–1980. 2nd ed. Overveen: ACASEA.Google Scholar
Hüsken, Frans. 2001. “Continuity and change in local politics.” In Beneath the Smoke of the Sugar-Mill: Javanese Coastal Communities during the Twentieth Century, edited by Kanó, Hiroyoshi, Hüsken, Frans, and Suryo, Djoko, 231263. Yogyakarta: Akatiga and Gadjah Mada University Press.Google Scholar
Kaag, Mayke, Brons, Johan, De Bruijn, Mirjam, De Haan, Leo J., Nooteboom, Gerben, Van Berkel, Rik, Van Dijk, Han, and Zoomers, Annelies. 2004. “Ways forward in livelihood research.” In Globalization and Development: Themes and Concepts in Current Research, edited by Kalb, Don, Pansters, Wil, and Siebers, Hans, 5074. Dordrecht, Boston, and London: Kluwer Academic Publishers.Google Scholar
Kanó, Hiroyoshi, Frans, Hüsken, and Djoko, Suryo. 2001. Beneath the Smoke of the Sugar-Mill: Javanese Coastal Communities during the Twentieth Century. Yogyakarta: Akatiga and Gadjah Mada University Press.Google Scholar
Kanó, Hiroyoshi. 2015. “Deagrarianization and shift to a service-based economy: outline of socio-economic change in Comal since 1990.” Paper presented at the Analytical workshop on the Comal Restudy, Gajah Mada University, Yogyakarta, March 2015.Google Scholar
Kelkar, Govind. 2006. The Feminization of Agriculture in Asia: Implications for Women's Agency and Productivity. New Delhi: UNIFEM South Asia Regional Office.Google Scholar
Koning, Juliette. 2005. “The impossible return? The post-migration narratives of young women in rural Java.Asian Journal of Social Science 33(2): 165185.Google Scholar
Kutanegara, Pande Made. 2017. Poverty, Crises and Social Solidarity in Shriharjo. Yogyakarta: Percetakan Kanisius.Google Scholar
Kutanegara, Pande Made, and Gerben, Nooteboom. 2002. “Forgotten villages, the effects of the crisis and the role of the government in rural Java.” In Riding a Tiger: Decentralisation and Regionalisation in Indonesia, edited by Holtzappel, Coen, Sanders, Martin, and Titus, Milan, 248277. Amsterdam: Rozenberg Publishers.Google Scholar
Li, Tania. 2009. “To make live or let die? Rural dispossession and the protection of surplus populations.Antipode 14(6): 12081235.Google Scholar
Li, Tania. 2014. Land's End: Capitalist Relations on an Indigenous Frontier. Durham and London: Duke University Press.Google Scholar
McCarthy, John F., Vel, Jacqueline A.C., and Suraya, Afiff. 2012. “Trajectories of land acquisition and enclosure: Development schemes, virtual land grabs, and green acquisitions in Indonesia's Outer Islands.” Journal of Peasant Studies 39(2): 521549.Google Scholar
Munck, Ronaldo. 2013. “The precariat: A view from the South.” Third World Quarterly 34(5): 747762. doi:10.1080/01436597.2013.800751.Google Scholar
Nooteboom, Gerben. 2015. Forgotten People: Poverty, Risk and Social Security in Indonesia. Leiden and Boston: Brill Academic Publishers.Google Scholar
Nooteboom, Gerben, and Rutten, Mario. 2012. “Magic bullets of development: Assumptions, teleology and popularity of three solutions to end poverty.” In Re-integrating technology and economy in human life and society: proceedings of the 17th annual working conference of the IIDE, Maarssen, May 2011, Vol. I, edited by Lucius Botes, Roel Jongeneel, and Sytse Strijbos, 103–120. Bloemfontein: IIDE.Google Scholar
Peluso, Nancy Lee, and Purwanto, Agus Budi. 2017. “The remittance forest: Turning mobile labor into agrarian capital.” Singapore Journal of Tropical Geography 39: 636. doi:10.1111/sjtg.12225.Google Scholar
Rigg, Jonathan. 2013. “From rural to urban: A geography of boundary crossing in Southeast Asia.” TRaNS: Trans -Regional and -National Studies of Southeast Asia 1(1): 526. doi:10.1017/trn.2012.6.Google Scholar
Rigg, Jonathan. 2015. Challenging Southeast Asian Development: The Shadows of Success. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Rigg, Jonathan, Salamanca, Albert, and Thompson, Eric C.. 2016. “The puzzle of East and Southeast Asia's persistent smallholder.” Journal of Rural Studies 43: 118133. doi:10.1016/j.jrurstud.2015.11.003.Google Scholar
Rigg, Jonathan, and Vandergeest, Peter. 2012. Revisiting Rural Places: Pathways to Poverty and Prosperity in Southeast Asia. Singapore: NUS Press.Google Scholar
Rist, Gilbert. 2013. “Development as a buzzword.” Development in Practice 17(4): 485491. doi:10.1080/09614520701469328.Google Scholar
Schenk-Sandbergen, Loes. 2018. “De-feminisation of agricultural wage labour in Jalpaiguri, West Bengal.” Economic and Political Weekly 53(25): 4653.Google Scholar
Singarimbun, Masri. 1996. “Peluang kerja dan kemiskinan di miri Sriharjo.” Penduduk Dan Perubahan. Yogyakarta: Pustaka Pelajar.Google Scholar
Singarimbun, Masri, and David, Penny. 1973. Population and Poverty in Rural Java: Some Economic Arithmetic from Sriharjo. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Van Moll, J.F.A.C., and Jacob's, H.. 1913–1914. De Desa-Volkshuishouding in Cijfers [2 volumes]. Den Haag: Algemeen Syndicaat van Suikerfabrikanten in Nederlandsch Indië.Google Scholar
Van der Ploeg, Jan Douwe. 2008. The New Peasantries: Struggles for Autonomy and Sustainability in an Era of Empire and Globalization. London: Earthscan.Google Scholar
Van der Ploeg, Jan Douwe. 2010. “The peasantries of the twenty-first century: The commoditisation debate revisited.” Journal of Peasant Studies 37(1): 130.Google Scholar
White, Benjamin. 1991. “Economic diversification and agrarian change in rural Java, 1900–1990.” In In the Shadow of Agriculture: Non-Farm Activities in the Javanese Economy, Past and Present, edited by Alexander, Paul, Boomgaard, Peter, and White, Ben, 4169. Amsterdam: Royal Tropical Institute.Google Scholar
White, Benjamin. 2000. “Rice harvesting and social change in Java: An unfinished debate.” The Asia Pacific Journal of Anthropology 1(1): 79102.Google Scholar
Woensdregt, Wietse. 2014. “Rural Families, Urban Employees: The Impact of Internal Labour Migration on a Rural Village in Central Java.” MA diss., University of Amsterdam.Google Scholar
World Bank. 2008. World Development Report: Agriculture for Development. Washington DC.Google Scholar