The demise of swidden in Southeast Asia? Local realities and regional ambiguities.
Padoch, Christine ; Coffey, Kevin ; Mertz, Ole 等
Swidden farmers throughout Southeast Asia are rapidly abandoning
traditional land use practices. While these changes have been quantified
in numerous local areas, no reliable region-wide data have been
produced. In this article we discuss three linked issues that account
for at least some of this knowledge gap. First, swidden is a diverse,
complex, and dynamic land use that data gatherers find difficult to see,
define and measure, and therefore often relegate to a "residual
category" of land use. Second, swidden is a smallholder category,
and government authorities find it difficult to quantify what is
happening in many dynamic and varied smallholdings. Third, national
policies in all countries of Southeast Asia have tried to outlaw swidden
farming and to encourage swiddeners to adopt permanent agriculture land
use practices. Drawing on specific, local examples from throughout the
region [including Indonesian and Malaysian Borneo] to illustrate these
points, we argue that an accurate assessment of the scale and pace of
changes in swidden farming on a regional level is critically important
for identifying the processes that account for these shifts, as well as
evaluating their consequences, locally and regionally [Reed L. Wadley].
Danish Journal of Geography/Geografisk Tidsskrift 107(1): 29-41.