Summary information

Study title

Perceptions of fishing, fire, and changes in livelihoods in Indonesia 2019

Creator

Thornton, S, University of Leicester

Study number / PID

854204 (UKDA)

10.5255/UKDA-SN-854204 (DOI)

Data access

Restricted

Series

Not available

Abstract

Data collection consists of transcripts of interviews conducted in two villages in Indonesia, Kereng Bangkirai and Taruna Jaya, in May 2019. In each village 10 participants were interviewed, half of these women and half men. Interview topics covered perceptions and challenges of fishing, perceptions of peatland damming projects, perceptions of changes in livelihoods (e.g. tourism and swift houses), and experiences of fire. This fellowship focuses on sustainable livelihoods in Indonesian tropical peatlands to support poverty alleviation, increased food security and biocultural conservation. The proposed research for this fellowship targets two of the ESRC's research priorities in particular: Productivity and Climate Change. Tropical peatlands are one of the Earth's most spatially efficient terrestrial carbon sinks and Indonesia is home to the greatest extent of these habitats worldwide. However, peatlands in Indonesia are facing numerous threats from human pressures, including drainage, burning and conversion to agriculture and plantations (e.g. palm oil and paper pulp). Exploitation of peatlands is driven by the short term economic needs of smallholder communities as well as larger industries, but this contributes to serious carbon emissions and climate change. Communities located in peatlands suffer from high levels of poverty linked to resource degradation, low agricultural productivity and marginalisation. Climate change will further impact the resilience of these communities. Fishing is one of the main sources of livelihood and protein in Central Kalimantan, and often supports some of the poorest members of society. Nevertheless, fish and fishing livelihoods in Borneo have received little research attention in the past which is why I decided to focus on these aspects for my PhD and continue to do so for this fellowship. It is vital to improve our understanding of the linkages between livelihoods, peatland and forest degradation, community resilience, poverty...
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Methodology

Data collection period

14/05/2019 - 22/05/2019

Country

Indonesia

Time dimension

Not available

Analysis unit

Individual

Universe

Not available

Sampling procedure

Not available

Kind of data

Text

Data collection mode

Interview participants were selected opportunistically while walking through the village. In each location 5 men and 5 women were interviewed. These were at times accompanied by other members of their family (noted in the interview). A semi-structured interview method was employed, using a list of questions as initial guidance. Interviews were conducted using the help of a translator (into Dayak or Indonesian language). Interview data was recorded through note-taking and audio recordings. Transcripts in English were then made of the audio-recordings.

Funding information

Grant number

ES/S01165X/1

Access

Publisher

UK Data Service

Publication year

2020

Terms of data access

The Data Collection is available for download to users registered with the UK Data Service.

Related publications

Not available