Employment and Income of Workers on Indonesian Oil Palm Plantations: Food Crisis at the Micro Level

被引:0
|
作者
Sinaga, Hariati [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Kassel, Int Ctr Dev & Decent Work, Kassel, Germany
关键词
Palm oil; Indonesia; Trade liberalisation; Labour rights; Employment; Income; Food security; Food crisis;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
TS2 [食品工业];
学科分类号
0832 ;
摘要
The importance of oil palm sector for Indonesia is inevitable as the country currently serves as the world's largest producer of crude palm oil. This paper focuses on the situation of workers on Indonesian oil palm plantations. It attempts to investigate whether the remarkable development of the sector is followed by employment opportunities and income generation for workers. This question is posed within the theoretical framework on the link between trade liberalisation and labour rights, particularly in a labour-intensive and low-skilled sector. Based on extensive field research in Riau, this paper confirms that despite the rapid development of the oil palm plantation sector in Indonesia, the situations of workers in the sector remain deplorable, particularly their employment status and income. This also attests that trade liberalisation in the sector adversely affects labour rights. The poor working conditions also have ramifications for food security at the micro level.
引用
收藏
页码:64 / 78
页数:15
相关论文
共 30 条
  • [1] Participation and power in Indonesian oil palm plantations
    Gillespie, Piers
    ASIA PACIFIC VIEWPOINT, 2012, 53 (03) : 254 - 271
  • [2] Land-Use Changes and Food Insecurity around Oil Palm Plantations: Evidence at the Village Level
    Sudrajat, Jajat
    Suyatno, Adi
    Oktoriana, Shenny
    FOREST AND SOCIETY, 2021, 5 (02) : 352 - 364
  • [3] Host-parasitoid food webs in oil palm plantations in Asia
    Rizali, Akhmad
    Buchori, Damayanti
    CURRENT OPINION IN INSECT SCIENCE, 2024, 66
  • [4] Depletion of Indonesian oil palm plantations implied from modeling oil palm mortality and Ganoderma boninense rot under future climate
    Monteith Paterson, Robert Russell
    AIMS ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE, 2020, 7 (05) : 366 - 379
  • [5] Soil greenhouse gas emissions from inorganic fertilizers and recycled oil palm waste products from Indonesian oil palm plantations
    Rahman, Niharika
    Bruun, Thilde Bech
    Giller, Ken E.
    Magid, Jakob
    van de Ven, Gerrie W. J.
    de Neergaard, Andreas
    GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY BIOENERGY, 2019, 11 (09): : 1056 - 1074
  • [6] Development narratives, notions of forest crisis, and boom of oil palm plantations in Indonesia
    Susanti, Ari
    Maryudi, Ahmad
    FOREST POLICY AND ECONOMICS, 2016, 73 : 130 - 139
  • [7] Food safety & nutrition issues: challenges and opportunities for Indonesian palm oil
    Hariyadi, P.
    1ST INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON SUSTAINABLE PLANTATION (1ST ICSP 2019), 2020, 418
  • [8] People, Palms, and Productivity: Testing Better Management Practices in Indonesian Smallholder Oil Palm Plantations
    Woittiez, Lotte S.
    Slingerland, Maja
    van Noordwijk, Meine
    Silalahi, Abner J.
    van Heerwaarden, Joost
    Giller, Ken E.
    AGRICULTURE-BASEL, 2024, 14 (09):
  • [9] The response of soil respiration to climatic drivers in undrained forest and drained oil palm plantations in an Indonesian peatland
    Swails, E.
    Hertanti, D.
    Hergoualc'h, K.
    Verchot, L.
    Lawrence, D.
    BIOGEOCHEMISTRY, 2019, 142 (01) : 37 - 51
  • [10] Spillovers to Manufacturing Plants from Multimillion Dollar Plantations: Evidence from the Indonesian Palm Oil Boom
    Kraus, Sebastian
    Heilmayr, Robert
    Koch, Nicolas
    JOURNAL OF THE ASSOCIATION OF ENVIRONMENTAL AND RESOURCE ECONOMISTS, 2024, 11 (03) : 613 - 656