All Stories

  1. Forms of Life
  2. Commons, co-ops, and corporations: assembling Indonesia’s twenty-first century land reform
  3. Politics, Interrupted
  4. After the land grab: Infrastructural violence and the “Mafia System” in Indonesia's oil palm plantation zones
  5. After Development: Surplus Population and the Politics of Entitlement
  6. The Practice of Critique: A Comment on Fassin
  7. Rendering land investible: Five notes on time
  8. Intergenerational displacement in Indonesia’s oil palm plantation zone
  9. The Price of Un/Freedom: Indonesia's Colonial and Contemporary Plantation Labor Regimes
  10. Land's End: Response by Tania M. Li
  11. Unfree Labour and Extractive Regimes in Colonial Java and Beyond
  12. Governing rural Indonesia: convergence on the project system
  13. Transnational Farmland Investment: A Risky Business
  14. Social impacts of oil palm in Indonesia: A gendered perspective from West Kalimantan
  15. Fixing Non-market Subjects: Governing Land and Population in the Global South
  16. Can there be food sovereignty here?
  17. Enclosure
  18. Positions
  19. Introduction
  20. Conclusion
  21. Index
  22. Politics, Revisited
  23. Capitalist Relations
  24. Notes
  25. Work and Care
  26. Land’s End
  27. What is land? Assembling a resource for global investment
  28. Involution's dynamic others
  29. Jobless growth and relative surplus populations(Respond to this article at http://www.therai.org.uk/at/debate)
  30. Insistently seeking social incorporation
  31. To Make Live or Let Die? Rural Dispossession and the Protection of Surplus Populations
  32. Pathways to Sustainability: Perspectives and Provocations
  33. Centering labor in the land grab debate
  34. Indigeneity, Capitalism, and the Management of Dispossession
  35. The Will to Improve: Governmentality, Development, and the Practice of Politics by Tania Murray Li
  36. To Make Live or Let Die? Rural Dispossession and the Protection of Surplus Populations
  37. RevisitingThe Will to Improve
  38. Exit from agriculture: a step forward or a step backward for the rural poor?
  39. Reading theWorld Development Report 2008: Agriculture for Development
  40. The Will to Improve: Governmentality, Development, and the Practice of Politicsby Tania Murray Li
  41. Social reproduction, situated politics, and The Will to Improve
  42. Practices of assemblage and community forest management
  43. Rendering Technical?
  44. Contradictory Positions
  45. Politics in Contention
  46. Provocation and Reversal
  47. The Will to Improve
  48. Formations of Capital and Identity
  49. Development in the Age of Neoliberalism
  50. Projects, Practices, and Effects
  51. Introduction
  52. The Revival of Tradition in Indonesian Politics
  53. Beyond "the State" and Failed Schemes
  54. Masyarakat Adat, Difference, and the Limits of Recognition in Indonesia’s Forest Zone.
  55. Ethnic cleansing, recursive knowledge, and the dilemmas of sedentarism
  56. Local Histories, Global Markets: Cocoa and Class in Upland Sulawesi
  57. Engaging Simplifications: Community-Based Resource Management, Market Processes and State Agendas in Upland Southeast Asia
  58. Agrarian Differentiation and the Limits of Natural Resource Management in Upland Southeast Asia
  59. Masyarakat Adat, Difference, and the Limits of Recognition in Indonesia's Forest Zone
  60. Relational Histories and the Production of Difference on Sulawesi's Upland Frontier
  61. Articulating Indigenous Identity in Indonesia: Resource Politics and the Tribal Slot
  62. Compromising Power:Development,Culture, and Rule in Indonesia
  63. Working Separately but Eating Together: Personhood, Property, and Power in Conjugal Relations
  64. Images of Community: Discourse and Strategy in Property Relations
  65. Restructured Worlds / Restructured Debates: Globalization, Development and Gender