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Promised Land: Palm Oil and Land Ac
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Acknowledgements The authors would
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Contents Executive Summary 11 Chapt
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Acronyms ADB AMDAL ANDAL APL BAL BA
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SKT SPPT TGHK UN UPSB UPSBM UPSBK U
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mainly so speculators can get acces
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Policies Favour Large-scale Plantat
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In effect the government is failing
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Chapter 1 Introduction 1.1 Reasons
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Notwithstanding these limitations,
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6 5 4 3 Million Hectares 2 1 0 1968
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figures, in the past five years, an
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Table 1.2. Provincial Government Pl
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Figure 1.5 Areas of current oil pal
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Endnotes: 1 Foe 2004; Wakker 2004;
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Chapter 2 Towards Responsible Palm
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The 25 persons were selected from a
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Details about negotiated agreements
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A simplified version of the TNC/DfI
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Negotiating acceptable standards fo
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Chapter 3 The Normative Framework -
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3.2 Government Policy on Palm Oil D
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evaluate proposals for conversion o
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Moreover, although the Act emphasiz
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corresponding customary law communi
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Although the application of this pr
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were part of national development p
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electricity. 52 It is not clear tha
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ISSUANCE PROCEDURE STAGES FOR PLANT
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Translation Section for the table a
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According to the Decree, to obtain
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Article 8 of this decree states tha
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Table 3.1: Indonesian Forest Area b
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option available. The overarching l
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several times the last being Staatb
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Chapter 4 Case Studies As part of t
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In the 1990s, the coastal adat comm
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In the New Order era, communities w
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project participants, who have not
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Testimony of Mr. Ajan, from Ngaras,
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On 10 December 1993, the land offic
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fact that the compensation being pr
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- Page 122 and 123: Mr. Ir. Pontas Sihotang, Head of Pl
- Page 124 and 125: of executive members. In this situa
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- Page 128 and 129: Local people strongly rejected the
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▪ If RSPO adopted lowered standar
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Boomgard (1998) Between Sovereign D
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ICBS (1997: 88) Kalimantan Review (
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Sargent, Howard J (2001) Vegetation
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Appendix Total 8 Principles and 39
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promote the positive ones are made,