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Memenuhi harapan banyak kalangan yang ingin mendapatkan bahan sebagai awal dari penelitian atau untuk mendapatkan perbandingan kemajuan suatu upaya pemberdayaan masyarakat, sebagian dari tulisan itu di edit Pak Indro dan disajikan dalam buku ini dengan harapan bisa menambah inspirasi bagi generasi muda bagaimana melanjutkan upaya pemberdayaan dan langkah-langkah yang lebih berani bahwa sesungguhnya potensi desa dan keluarga desa masih sangat terbuka lebar untuk dikembangkan guna mendukung kemajuan negara dan bangsa Indonesia yang sangat kita cintai. Semoga cerita yang kelihatan ringan dan di muat dalam penerbitan ini sesungguhnya merupakan ratna mutu manikam yang kalau diasah lebih tajam dan disajikan lebih menarik akan menghasilkanornamen yang sangat mulia dan memiliki nilai tinggi. Kami persilahkan para pembaca, utamanya generasi muda untuk menggunakan bahan dasar yang disajikan dalam buku ini dikembangkan lebih lanjut.
This book reveals how everyday experiences of being ‘modern’ (c. 1920s-70s) indexed continuity and change in the transition from colonialism to independence and after in Southeast Asia. In the Philippines, Myanmar, Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam, the contributors to this interdisciplinary volume recover modern times at the intersection of public and private domains, encompassing sex, religion, art, film, literature and urban space. The authors examine the conditions and representations of modernity, as shaped by elites and the governed, by actors, artists, novelists and non-fiction writers. Plural encounters in cities, through spiritual communities, art, high and popular culture saw Southeast Asians fashioning modern times in dialogue with global capitalism, consumer culture and second-wave feminism.
The premise of Social Science and Power in Indonesia is that the role and development of social sciences in Indonesia over the past fifty years are inextricably related to the shifting requirements of power. What is researched and what is not, which frameworks achieve paradigmatic status while others are marginalized, and which kinds of social scientists become influential while others are ignored are all matters of power. These and other important themes and issues are critically explored by some of Indonesia's foremost social scientists in this seminal work.
In Infrastructures of Impunity Elizabeth F. Drexler argues that the creation and persistence of impunity for the perpetrators of the Cold War Indonesian genocide (1965–66) is not only a legal status but also a cultural and social process. Impunity for the initial killings and for subsequent acts of political violence has many elements: bureaucratic, military, legal, political, educational, and affective. Although these elements do not always work at once—at times some are dormant while others are ascendant—together they can be described as a unified entity, a dynamic infrastructure, whose existence explains the persistence of impunity. For instance, truth telling, a first step in many responses to state violence, did not undermine the infrastructure but instead bent to it. Creative and artistic responses to revelations about the past, however, have begun to undermine the infrastructure by countering its temporality, affect, and social stigmatization and demonstrating its contingency and specific actions, policies, and processes that would begin to dismantle it. Drexler contends that an infrastructure of impunity could take hold in an established democracy.
A Casebook in Business Management: Indonesian Traditional Herbal Industry provides materials to support the application of case-based method in classes. It is applicable for undergraduate and master’s students focusing on management studies. The cases discuss myriads of topics that require in-depth analysis based on human resource management, strategic management, operations management, and financial management concepts. The cases are divided into several themes including organizational behavior, strategic management, supply chain management, financial management, quality management, and product diversification. To analyze the cases presented in this book, students may employ numerous tool...
In Multidimensional Evolution, author Kim McCaul recounts his journey to Java seeking a technique to help calm the demons that had been troubling him for the previous two years and his subsequent realisation that those demons were not the product of his own mind, but were actually real non-physical people who had been pursuing him from a previous life. It then focuses on three of the teachers that guided the author through insights and experiences on his search for understanding: Pak Sujono, who ran a meditation centre in Indonesia; a housewife in England, who enjoyed remarkable psychic abilities and the capacity to significantly alter the energies of those around her, and Waldo Vieira a Brazilian consciousness researcher and psychic. Multidimensional Evolution encourages readers to experiment for themselves, have their own experiences, come to their own understandings and make the most of this current physical lifetime. ,
For centuries, reports of man-eating tigers in Indonesia, Malaysia, and Singapore have circulated, shrouded in myth and anecdote. This fascinating book documents the “big cat”–human relationship in this area during its 350-year colonial period, re-creating a world in which people feared tigers but often came into contact with them, because these fierce predators prefer habitats created by human interference. Peter Boomgaard shows how people and tigers adapted to each other’s behavior, each transmitting this learning from one generation to the next. He discusses the origins of stories and rituals about tigers and explains how cultural biases of Europeans and class differences among indigenous populations affected attitudes toward the tigers. He provides figures on their populations in different eras and analyzes the factors contributing to their present status as an endangered species. Interweaving stories about Malay kings, colonial rulers, tiger charmers, and bounty hunters with facts about tigers and their way of life, the book is an engrossing combination of environmental and micro history.
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