• editor@ijmra.in
  • ISSN[Online] : 2643-9875  ||  ISSN[Print] : 2643-9840

VOLUME 04 ISSUE 12 December 2021

Weak Land Management as a Cause of Mining Land Overlap
Himawan Nuryahya
FMining Engineering Department & Gedung Dekanat UNISBA Lt. 5 Jalan Taman Sari No. 24 - 26 Bandung 40116
DOI : https://doi.org/10.47191/ijmra/v4-i12-03

Google Scholar Download Pdf
ABSTRACT:

Indonesia is a country rich in natural resources, both on land and throughout the waters of the archipelago. The rights of the Indonesian people contain 2 (two) elements, namely the element of ownership and the element of the task of authority to regulate and lead the control and use of the joint land it owns, the authority to regulate the control of the use of the joint land is delegated to the State. To regulate the rights of the Indonesian nation as the highest right holder, it is authorized to the State of the Republic of Indonesia which is the powerful organization of the entire people. However, it should be understood that there are still many problems faced in land management, especially mining areas that intersect with forestry and plantations. The purpose of this study is to observe and evaluate the weaknesses in land management which result in overlapping land in the mining area. The method used in this research is Mixed Methods. The strategy in this study uses the Concurrent Embedded Strategy method. The use of Concurrent Embedded Strategy in research will be implemented in the form of qualitative and quantitative data collection at the same time. The reality that will be examined in this research is the coordination of overcoming overlapping land at 47 IUP OP locations in Kutai Kartanegara Regency, in terms of the factors that influence the success of coordination. The lack of coordination in overcoming overlapping land is dominantly caused by the behavior of the apparatus which is formed by the dimensions and indicators of its formation, namely the mandate and the system. Agencies that issue land use permits only have land-use data within their jurisdiction, this is due to the absence of a centralized integrated land data system that can be accessed by all agencies and stakeholders.

Keywords

Coal, Land Use, Overlapping Permits, Policies and Spatial Planning

REFERENCES

1) Budy P. Resosudarmo, Ida Aju Pradnja Resosudarmo, Wijayono Sarosa, and Nina L. Subiman. (2009). Growth, Instability, and Conflict in the Middle East and Asia. The Henry L. Stimson Center. ISBN: 978-0-9821935-0-1.

2) World Bank Middle East and North Africa Regional Water Initiative, “Middle East and Mediterranean Regional Day: Moving from Scarcity to Security through Policy Reform,” Summary Report (Kyoto, Japan: World Bank, 2003).

3) NUHIDAYAH, L., DAVIES, P. J., & ALAM, S. (2020). Resolving Land-Use Conflicts over Indonesia’s Customary Forests: One Map, Power Contestations and Social Justice. Contemporary Southeast Asia, 42(3), 372–397. https://www.jstor.org/stable/26996201.

4) Yasmi, Y., Kelley, L., Murdiyarso, D. and Patel, T., (2012). The struggle over Asia's forests: An overview of forest conflict and potential implications for REDD+. International Forestry Review, 14(1), pp. 99-109.

5) R. Yando Zakaria, Rimawan Pradiptyo, Paramita Iswari dan Putu Sanjiwacika Wibisana. (2018). The Cost Of Land and Natural Resources Conflict : A Coomunity Prespective. Circle for Rural and Agrarian Reform (KARSA). Yogyakarta, Indonesia.

6) Fuhrmann, N.L. (2013). O primado do reconhecimento sobre a redistribuição: A origem dos conflitos sociais a partir da teoria de Axel Honneth. Sociologias, 15, 170–203.

7) Zhou, Hao, Yong Chen, and Ruoying Tian. (2021). "Land-Use Conflict Identification from the Perspective of Construction Space Expansion: An Evaluation Method Based on ‘Likelihood-Exposure-Consequence’" ISPRS International Journal of Geo-Information 10, no. 7: 433. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijgi10070433

8) Zou, L.; Liu, Y.; Wang, J.; Yang, Y.; Wang, Y. (2019). Land use conflict identification and sustainable development scenario simulation on China’s southeast coast. J. Clean. Prod. 238.

9) Zhou, D.; Xu, J.; Lin, Z. (2017). Conflict or coordination? Assessing land use multi-functionalization using production living-ecology analysis. Sci. Total Environ. 577, 136–147.

10) Kim, I.; Arnhold, S. (2018). Mapping environmental land use conflict potentials and ecosystem services in agricultural watersheds. Sci. Total Environ. 630, 827–838.

11) Kuusaana, E.D.; Bukari, K.N. (2015). Land conflicts between smallholders and Fulani pastoralists in Ghana: Evidence from the Asante Akim North District (AAND). J. Rural Stud. 42, 52–62.

12) Bircol, G.A.C.; Souza, M.P.d.; Fontes, A.T.; Chiarello, A.G.; Ranieri, V.E.L. Planning by the rules. (2018). A fair chance for the environment in a land-use conflict area. Land Use Policy, 76, 103–112.

13) Anderson, N.M.; Ford, R.M.; Williams, K.J.H. (2017). Contested beliefs about land-use are associated with divergent representations of a rural landscape as place. Landsc. Urban Plan. 157, 75–89.

14) Zhou, D.; Xu, J.; Lin, Z. Conflict or coordination? Assessing land use multi-functionalization using production-living ecology analysis. Sci. Total Environ. 2017, 577, 136–147.

15) Kim, I.; Arnhold, S. Mapping environmental land use conflict potentials and ecosystem services in agricultural watersheds. Sci. Total Environ. 2018, 630, 827–838.

16) Kuusaana, E.D.; Bukari, K.N. Land conflicts between smallholders and Fulani pastoralists in Ghana: Evidence from the Asante Akim North District (AAND). J. Rural Stud. 2015, 42, 52–62.

17) Bircol, G.A.C.; Souza, M.P.d.; Fontes, A.T.; Chiarello, A.G.; Ranieri, V.E.L. Planning by the rules: A fair chance for the environment in a land-use conflict area. Land Use Policy 2018, 76, 103–112.

18) Anderson, N.M.; Ford, R.M.; Williams, K.J.H. Contested beliefs about land-use are associated with divergent representations of a rural landscape as place. Landsc. Urban Plan. 2017, 157, 75–89. [CrossRef]

19) Pacheco, F.A.L.; Varandas, S.G.P.; Sanches Fernandes, L.F.; Valle Junior, R.F. Soil losses in rural watersheds with environmental land use conflicts. Sci. Total Environ. 2014, 485, 110–120. [CrossRef]

20) Karimi, A.; Hockings, M. A social-ecological approach to land-use conflict to inform regional and conservation planning and management. Landsc. Ecol. 2018, 33, 691–710. [CrossRef]

21) Valle Junior, R.F.; Varandas, S.G.P.; Pacheco, F.A.L.; Pereira, V.R.; Santos, C.F.; Cortes, R.M.V.; Sanches Fernandes, L.F. Impacts of land use conflicts on riverine ecosystems. Land Use Policy 2015, 43, 48–62. [CrossRef]

VOLUME 04 ISSUE 12 December 2021

Our Services and Policies

Authors should prepare their manuscripts according to the instructions given in the authors' guidelines. Manuscripts which do not conform to the format and style of the Journal may be returned to the authors for revision or rejected.

The Journal reserves the right to make any further formal changes and language corrections necessary in a manuscript accepted for publication so that it conforms to the formatting requirements of the Journal.

International Journal of Multidisciplinary Research and Analysis will publish 12 monthly online issues per year,IJMRA publishes articles as soon as the final copy-edited version is approved. IJMRA publishes articles and review papers of all subjects area.

Open access is a mechanism by which research outputs are distributed online, Hybrid open access journals, contain a mixture of open access articles and closed access articles.

International Journal of Multidisciplinary Research and Analysis initiate a call for research paper for Volume 07 Issue 05 (May 2024).

PUBLICATION DATES:
1) Last Date of Submission : 26 May 2024 .
2) Article published within a week.
3) Submit Article : editor@ijmra.in or Online

Why with us

International Journal of Multidisciplinary Research and Analysis is better then other journals because:-
1 : IJMRA only accepts original and high quality research and technical papers.
2 : Paper will publish immediately in current issue after registration.
3 : Authors can download their full papers at any time with digital certificate.

The Editors reserve the right to reject papers without sending them out for review.

Authors should prepare their manuscripts according to the instructions given in the authors' guidelines. Manuscripts which do not conform to the format and style of the Journal may be returned to the authors for revision or rejected. The Journal reserves the right to make any further formal changes and language corrections necessary in a manuscript accepted for publication so that it conforms to the formatting requirements of the Journal.

Indexed In
Avatar Avatar Avatar Avatar Avatar Avatar Avatar Avatar Avatar Avatar Avatar Avatar Avatar Avatar Avatar Avatar Avatar Avatar Avatar Avatar Avatar Avatar Avatar Avatar Avatar Avatar Avatar Avatar Avatar Avatar Avatar Avatar Avatar Avatar Avatar Avatar