Informal cross-border trade: Malaysia-Indonesia borders the conceptualisation from ‘authority-defined’ to "everyday-defined"
For these border studies, understanding borderlanders provides a new narrative about boundaries. The history of a nation-state of a collective nature, the alignment of power, economic segmentation, and integration of culture, ethnicity, and identity, religion, the behavior of marginal communities, a...
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Business and Entrepreneurship Incubator Center Universitas Muhammadiyah Jakarta
2022
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Online Access: | https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/36536/3/ABSTRACT.pdf https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/36536/2/FULLTEXT.pdf https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/36536/ https://doi.org/10.54268/baskara.5.1.108-122 |
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my.ums.eprints.365362023-08-17T04:13:52Z https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/36536/ Informal cross-border trade: Malaysia-Indonesia borders the conceptualisation from ‘authority-defined’ to "everyday-defined" Fauzie Sarjono Endang Rudiatin HD28-9999 Industries. Land use. Labor For these border studies, understanding borderlanders provides a new narrative about boundaries. The history of a nation-state of a collective nature, the alignment of power, economic segmentation, and integration of culture, ethnicity, and identity, religion, the behavior of marginal communities, as well as modern socio-political segregation are variables that can be raised in various disciplines. In this study, we offer a qualitative method with an ethnographic perspective, as many anthropologists do, but with a constructivist approach. We call it the conceptualization of "Authority-Defined" to "Everyday-Defined." The diversity of narratives and connotations in unraveling boundaries gives the perspective of contextual interpretation in different positions. Surely, understanding boundaries should also be seen in such a detailed context that the actors of border studies, i.e., society, are observed through the lens of meaning boundaries in their everyday lives. These differences lead to findings that are rich in dynamic and varied border backgrounds. This discussion focused on on-the-ground findings about informal cross-border trade, specifically at the Malaysia-Indonesia border. A trading system built by local communities is certainly different from the trade system in non-border areas and even in the country's capital area. Business and Entrepreneurship Incubator Center Universitas Muhammadiyah Jakarta 2022-10 Article NonPeerReviewed text en https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/36536/3/ABSTRACT.pdf text en https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/36536/2/FULLTEXT.pdf Fauzie Sarjono and Endang Rudiatin (2022) Informal cross-border trade: Malaysia-Indonesia borders the conceptualisation from ‘authority-defined’ to "everyday-defined". BASKARA: Journal of Business and Entrepreneurship, 5. pp. 108-122. https://doi.org/10.54268/baskara.5.1.108-122 |
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HD28-9999 Industries. Land use. Labor Fauzie Sarjono Endang Rudiatin Informal cross-border trade: Malaysia-Indonesia borders the conceptualisation from ‘authority-defined’ to "everyday-defined" |
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For these border studies, understanding borderlanders provides a new narrative about boundaries. The history of a nation-state of a collective nature, the alignment of power, economic segmentation, and integration of culture, ethnicity, and identity, religion, the behavior of marginal communities, as well as modern socio-political segregation are variables that can be raised in various disciplines. In this study, we offer a qualitative method with an ethnographic perspective, as many anthropologists do, but with a constructivist approach. We call it the conceptualization of "Authority-Defined" to "Everyday-Defined." The diversity of narratives and connotations in unraveling boundaries gives the perspective of contextual interpretation in different positions. Surely, understanding boundaries should also be seen in such a detailed context that the actors of border studies, i.e., society, are observed through the lens of meaning boundaries in their everyday lives. These differences lead to findings that are rich in dynamic and varied border backgrounds. This discussion focused on on-the-ground findings about informal cross-border trade, specifically at the Malaysia-Indonesia border. A trading system built by local communities is certainly different from the trade system in non-border areas and even in the country's capital area. |
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Article |
author |
Fauzie Sarjono Endang Rudiatin |
author_facet |
Fauzie Sarjono Endang Rudiatin |
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Fauzie Sarjono |
title |
Informal cross-border trade: Malaysia-Indonesia borders the conceptualisation from ‘authority-defined’ to "everyday-defined" |
title_short |
Informal cross-border trade: Malaysia-Indonesia borders the conceptualisation from ‘authority-defined’ to "everyday-defined" |
title_full |
Informal cross-border trade: Malaysia-Indonesia borders the conceptualisation from ‘authority-defined’ to "everyday-defined" |
title_fullStr |
Informal cross-border trade: Malaysia-Indonesia borders the conceptualisation from ‘authority-defined’ to "everyday-defined" |
title_full_unstemmed |
Informal cross-border trade: Malaysia-Indonesia borders the conceptualisation from ‘authority-defined’ to "everyday-defined" |
title_sort |
informal cross-border trade: malaysia-indonesia borders the conceptualisation from ‘authority-defined’ to "everyday-defined" |
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Business and Entrepreneurship Incubator Center Universitas Muhammadiyah Jakarta |
publishDate |
2022 |
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https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/36536/3/ABSTRACT.pdf https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/36536/2/FULLTEXT.pdf https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/36536/ https://doi.org/10.54268/baskara.5.1.108-122 |
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