TY - BOOK ID - 64859698 TI - Class and Conflict in the Fishers' Community in Indonesia PY - 2020 SN - 9811509867 9811509859 PB - Singapore : Springer Singapore : Imprint: Springer, DB - UniCat KW - Fishers KW - Anglers KW - Fishermen KW - Persons KW - Social conditions. KW - Social structure. KW - Social inequality. KW - Peace. KW - Social policy. KW - Ethnology. KW - Industrial sociology. KW - Social Structure, Social Inequality. KW - Conflict Studies. KW - Social Policy. KW - Social Anthropology. KW - Sociology of Work. KW - Sociology KW - Industrial organization KW - Industries KW - Cultural anthropology KW - Ethnography KW - Races of man KW - Social anthropology KW - Anthropology KW - Human beings KW - National planning KW - State planning KW - Economic policy KW - Family policy KW - Social history KW - Coexistence, Peaceful KW - Peaceful coexistence KW - International relations KW - Disarmament KW - Peace-building KW - Security, International KW - Egalitarianism KW - Inequality KW - Social equality KW - Social inequality KW - Political science KW - Democracy KW - Liberty KW - Organization, Social KW - Social organization KW - Social institutions KW - Social aspects KW - Equality. UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:64859698 AB - This book analyses social conflict among fishers in Indonesia by implementing class theory, thus adopting a new approach to analysing fishers’ conflicts in Indonesia. In using this approach, the book enables a comprehensive understanding of the nature of fishers’ social conflicts. It demonstrates that the primary cause triggering conflict among fishers in Indonesia is not exploitation, but domination. This domination causes injustice in terms of access among fishers, which in turn threatens their livelihood. The author unpacks the influence of political parties, and how macro-economic conditions and public policy have become contextual variables of these class conflicts in the fisheries community. The book presents the unique characteristics of class conflicts among fishers compared to class conflicts in industrial sectors, underpinned by Marxist theory. This book will be relevant to fisheries policy-makers in Indonesia and abroad, researchers and students in anthropology, sociology, and development economics, as well as community and rural development specialists and conservationists. . ER -