Full Description

Cataloguing Source : LibUI eng rda
ISSN : 16936086
Magazine/Journal : Jurnal Antropologi Indonesia
Volume : No.69 (2002)
Content Type : text (rdacontent)
Media Type : computer (rdamedia)
Carrier Type : online resource (rdacarrier)
Electronic Access : http://journal.ui.ac.id/index.php/jai/article/view/3449
Holding Company : Universitas Indonesia
Location :
 
  •  Availability
  •  Digital Files: 0
  •  Review
  •  Cover
  •  Abstract
Call Number Barcode Number Availability
AJ-Pdf 03-17-530643584 TERSEDIA
No review available for this collection: 20452210
 Abstract
"As postcolonial nations, the boundaries of countries in island Southeast Asia were determined and delineated by the respective colonial administrations prior to political independence. Consequently, the territorial boundaries approximately correspond with the territorial limits under colonial tutelage. Within these territories are to be found indigenous colonized population and resident immigrant populations encouraged by the economic opportunities provided by colonization. As postcolonial nations, these countries are unavoidably 'multiracial' or 'multiethnic', and thus 'multicultural', by their colonial legacies. Each of these countries has transformed this demographic and geographic reality into part of the national ideology and political practice, in respective ways that are historically over determined. This paper will attempt to place these three cases within a larger theoretical framework of multiculturalism and call for political adjustments in the three polities."