This book addresses the politics of environmental change in one of the
richest areas of tropical rainforest in Indonesia. Based on field
studies conducted in three agricultural communities in rural Aceh, this
work considers a number of questions: How do customary (adat) village
and state institutions work? What roles do they play in managing local
resources? How have they evolved over time? Are villagers, state
policies, or corrupt local networks responsible for the loss of tropical
rainforest? Will better outcomes emerge from revitalizing customary
management, from changing state policies, or from transforming the way
the state works? And why do projects designed by outsiders so often
fail?
The book describes how, as key actors interact, they create arrangements
that effectively manage local resources, eclipsing adat and formal
state management structures. While outside interventions try to work
with adat and the state, they fail to engage fully with the main
problem--that is, that district webs of power and interest, coalescing
around local resources and reaching into the wider society, lead
inexorably to environmental decline.