Commodity Booms, Conflict, and Organized Crime: Logics of Violence in Indonesia's Oil Palm Plantation Economy
Paul D. Kenny,
Rashesh Shrestha and
Edward Aspinall
Departmental Working Papers from The Australian National University, Arndt-Corden Department of Economics
Abstract:
This paper examines the relationships between agrarian commodity booms and the incidence of group con?ict and criminality in the context of Indonesia’s expanding oil palm sector. It theorizes that commodity boom violence takes two main forms: low level but organized criminal violence involved in the extortion of “rents” produced by a given commodity extraction and production process (extortion); and violent competition among a range of groups, including “ma?as”, youth gangs, landholders, and commercial producers for control of these rents (competition). Extortion and competition violence are associated with distinct temporal distributions consistent with our theory. Criminality–especially theft–is higher in villages with established and productive oil palm plantations (extortion), whereas villages undergoing planation expansion have a higher incidence of group con?ict (competition). Dynamic analyses utilizing panel data at the sub-district level support our causal interpretation, as the relationship between the area under oil palm cultivation and resource con?ict (competition) changes over time and with prevailing commodity prices. Our results are robust to the use of instrumental variable analysis to account for the potential endogeneity of plantation expansion. Our theorized mechanism is given further support by a targeted primary survey of 1,920 respondents in oil palm producing and non-producing villages, which shows that villages experience di?erent rates of extortion and competition violence depending both on if, and when, oil palm production commenced.
Keywords: political economy; ma?a; organized crime; violence; con?ict; natural resources; oil palm (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: D74 L73 O13 Q33 Q34 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Pages: 77 pages
Date: 2020
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-dev and nep-sea
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:pas:papers:2020-23
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