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The Contemporary Agrarian Change in Rice Production Village in Klaten Regency, Central Java

Muhammad Musiyam*, Sugeng Utaya, Singgih Susilo and Budi Handoyo
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Muhammad Musiyam*: Lecture of Universitas Muhammadiyah Surakarta, Indonesia
Sugeng Utaya: Lecture of Post Graduate Program, State University of Malang, Indonesia
Singgih Susilo: Lecture of Post Graduate Program, State University of Malang, Indonesia
Budi Handoyo: Lecture of Post Graduate Program, State University of Malang, Indonesia

The Journal of Social Sciences Research, 2019, vol. 5, issue 1, 16-22

Abstract: Rural Java areas underwent significant changes during the last 20 years due to increasing education and health level and improving transportation and communication infrastructure, but researches on agricultural transformation, especially rice farming in Java, was limited. This study aimed at understanding the structure of land ownership and tenure, and the changing of land tenure institutional system in wetland farming, in its relation to the contemporary demographic change in the Javanese rural areas. The research was conducted in Kauman Village, Klaten Regency, Central Java. There were 307 farmer households in the village. The samples of 52 farmer households were taken randomly. Data collection used questionnaires and in-depth interviews with 52 respondents and 6 key informants. The analysis was carried out by comparing the data before the green revolution and 2016 data. The results of the study were as follows. Firstly, the number of landless farmers was very large (60 percent). Despite the green revolution, the proportion of this group had been already high before the green revolution program was intensified. Secondly, the level of land ownership disparity was moderate and tended toward equity due to the continuity of land ownership fragmentation through land inheritance processes, and no land ownership concentration occurred on the basis of agricultural land purchase. Thirdly, the level of inequality of land tenure was moderate and even close to low, and tended toward equity as the number of land tenants was much greater than the land owners. Fourthly, the bargaining position of the land tenants tended to be stronger than the land owners due to the declining attraction of agricultural work as a source of employment.

Keywords: Landless farmers; Inequality of land ownership; Inequality of land tenure; Land tenure institutional system (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2019
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