Human Rights Cities in Indonesia - A case study of diverse approaches in Bandung City and Wonosobo Regency
(2019) MIDM19 20191Department of Human Geography
LUMID International Master programme in applied International Development and Management
- Abstract
- Building on a previous thesis, which focused on the historical emergence and transformations of different conceptions of so-called human rights cities (HRCs), this study focuses on the ramifications of operationalising the concept in practice in two cities on the Indonesian island Java. The thesis adopts sociological- and discursive new institutionalism as a point of departure for its analysis, looking at the social- and political practices of diffusing HRC. Fieldwork was conducted during a period of 10 weeks, in the mega city Bandung, which since 2015 have been known as Indonesia’s first human rights city, and in the rural region Wonosobo, which since 2013 have been working actively with the concept. The two cases represent vastly... (More)
- Building on a previous thesis, which focused on the historical emergence and transformations of different conceptions of so-called human rights cities (HRCs), this study focuses on the ramifications of operationalising the concept in practice in two cities on the Indonesian island Java. The thesis adopts sociological- and discursive new institutionalism as a point of departure for its analysis, looking at the social- and political practices of diffusing HRC. Fieldwork was conducted during a period of 10 weeks, in the mega city Bandung, which since 2015 have been known as Indonesia’s first human rights city, and in the rural region Wonosobo, which since 2013 have been working actively with the concept. The two cases represent vastly different societal contexts, and they have gone about the process of becoming human rights cities in very different ways. Still this study is able to identify certain commonalities and common challenges. In this way, it is possible to draw valuable lessons learned from the cases and get an understanding of the complexities of working with human rights at the local level through a concept that has yet to gain a clear definition or common understanding across actors. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
http://lup.lub.lu.se/student-papers/record/8975782
- author
- Viborg Jensen, Sofie LU
- supervisor
- organization
- course
- MIDM19 20191
- year
- 2019
- type
- H2 - Master's Degree (Two Years)
- subject
- keywords
- Cities, Urban Development, Human Rights, Local Governance, Indonesia, Case study
- language
- English
- id
- 8975782
- date added to LUP
- 2019-10-17 13:52:03
- date last changed
- 2019-10-17 13:52:03
@misc{8975782, abstract = {{Building on a previous thesis, which focused on the historical emergence and transformations of different conceptions of so-called human rights cities (HRCs), this study focuses on the ramifications of operationalising the concept in practice in two cities on the Indonesian island Java. The thesis adopts sociological- and discursive new institutionalism as a point of departure for its analysis, looking at the social- and political practices of diffusing HRC. Fieldwork was conducted during a period of 10 weeks, in the mega city Bandung, which since 2015 have been known as Indonesia’s first human rights city, and in the rural region Wonosobo, which since 2013 have been working actively with the concept. The two cases represent vastly different societal contexts, and they have gone about the process of becoming human rights cities in very different ways. Still this study is able to identify certain commonalities and common challenges. In this way, it is possible to draw valuable lessons learned from the cases and get an understanding of the complexities of working with human rights at the local level through a concept that has yet to gain a clear definition or common understanding across actors.}}, author = {{Viborg Jensen, Sofie}}, language = {{eng}}, note = {{Student Paper}}, title = {{Human Rights Cities in Indonesia - A case study of diverse approaches in Bandung City and Wonosobo Regency}}, year = {{2019}}, }