Then and now: changes in social organisation and livelihood of the Berawan community since the formation of Malaysia

The Berawan are a small Orang Ulu people group to which four longhouse communities belong: Long Jegan and Long Teru on the Tinjar River, and Long Terawan and Batu Belah on the Tutoh River.The Tutoh and the Tinjar aretributaries of the Baram river. This paper presents a socio-economic sketch of the B...

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Main Authors: Burkhardt, Jey Lingam, Burkhardt, Juergen Martin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: UNIMAS Publisher 2017
Online Access:http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/63555/1/Then%20and%20now.pdf
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/63555/
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Institution: Universiti Putra Malaysia
Language: English
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spelling my.upm.eprints.635552018-11-05T03:29:15Z http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/63555/ Then and now: changes in social organisation and livelihood of the Berawan community since the formation of Malaysia Burkhardt, Jey Lingam Burkhardt, Juergen Martin The Berawan are a small Orang Ulu people group to which four longhouse communities belong: Long Jegan and Long Teru on the Tinjar River, and Long Terawan and Batu Belah on the Tutoh River.The Tutoh and the Tinjar aretributaries of the Baram river. This paper presents a socio-economic sketch of the Berawan in the early 1960s and contrasts it with the early 21st century situation. A picture is drawn of the social organisation and livelihood of the Berawan community. The following trends are discernible: Longhouse living has become more comfortable but at the same time more cash dependent. The education level of the Berawan has risen significantly while their opportunities to engage in traditional livelihood activities such as rice planting, hunting and fishing are reduced nowadays due to the conversion of vast tracts of lands into palm oil plantations and the silting of the rivers. This has increasingly led the younger generation to migrate out of the village. On the other hand, contrary to popular belief that the tourism industry has a primarily adverse influence on ethnic minority culture, we found that the economic value that tourism offers can promote local culture in encouraging people to remain on their ancestral land. Keywords: Berawan, Orang Ulu, social organisation, livelihood, indigenous peoples, Sarawak. UNIMAS Publisher 2017 Article PeerReviewed text en http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/63555/1/Then%20and%20now.pdf Burkhardt, Jey Lingam and Burkhardt, Juergen Martin (2017) Then and now: changes in social organisation and livelihood of the Berawan community since the formation of Malaysia. Journal of Borneo-Kalimantan, 3 (1). 55 - 66. ISSN 2289-2583
institution Universiti Putra Malaysia
building UPM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Putra Malaysia
content_source UPM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://psasir.upm.edu.my/
language English
description The Berawan are a small Orang Ulu people group to which four longhouse communities belong: Long Jegan and Long Teru on the Tinjar River, and Long Terawan and Batu Belah on the Tutoh River.The Tutoh and the Tinjar aretributaries of the Baram river. This paper presents a socio-economic sketch of the Berawan in the early 1960s and contrasts it with the early 21st century situation. A picture is drawn of the social organisation and livelihood of the Berawan community. The following trends are discernible: Longhouse living has become more comfortable but at the same time more cash dependent. The education level of the Berawan has risen significantly while their opportunities to engage in traditional livelihood activities such as rice planting, hunting and fishing are reduced nowadays due to the conversion of vast tracts of lands into palm oil plantations and the silting of the rivers. This has increasingly led the younger generation to migrate out of the village. On the other hand, contrary to popular belief that the tourism industry has a primarily adverse influence on ethnic minority culture, we found that the economic value that tourism offers can promote local culture in encouraging people to remain on their ancestral land. Keywords: Berawan, Orang Ulu, social organisation, livelihood, indigenous peoples, Sarawak.
format Article
author Burkhardt, Jey Lingam
Burkhardt, Juergen Martin
spellingShingle Burkhardt, Jey Lingam
Burkhardt, Juergen Martin
Then and now: changes in social organisation and livelihood of the Berawan community since the formation of Malaysia
author_facet Burkhardt, Jey Lingam
Burkhardt, Juergen Martin
author_sort Burkhardt, Jey Lingam
title Then and now: changes in social organisation and livelihood of the Berawan community since the formation of Malaysia
title_short Then and now: changes in social organisation and livelihood of the Berawan community since the formation of Malaysia
title_full Then and now: changes in social organisation and livelihood of the Berawan community since the formation of Malaysia
title_fullStr Then and now: changes in social organisation and livelihood of the Berawan community since the formation of Malaysia
title_full_unstemmed Then and now: changes in social organisation and livelihood of the Berawan community since the formation of Malaysia
title_sort then and now: changes in social organisation and livelihood of the berawan community since the formation of malaysia
publisher UNIMAS Publisher
publishDate 2017
url http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/63555/1/Then%20and%20now.pdf
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/63555/
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