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Ref ID: 35162
Ref Type: Journal Article
Authors: Schoenfelder, John W.
Title: The co-evolution of agricultural and sociopolitical systems in Bali
Date: 2000
Source: Bulletin of the Indo-Pacific Prehistory Association
Notes: Indo-Pacific Prehistory: The Melaka Papers, Vol. 4
Abstract: The oft-studied social structure of ethnographic Bali features numerous kinds of overlapping function-specific actor groups. Understanding the emergence of this pattern should illuminate other cases where relatively mono-hierarchical "chiefdoms" developed into civilizations with different ideological, martial, managerial, and resource-possession power sources controlled by distinct institutions. Lansing's recent ethnographic and computer work suggests that agro-ecological concerns resulting from terrace placement precipitated the self-organization of a yield-enhancing autonomous "complex adaptive system" of water-temple congregations managing ricefield irrigation. This may have forced co-existing extractive polities to change and narrow legitimacy and finance mechanisms. Efforts are in progress to use landscape analyses and archaeological data to evaluate these ideas and to provide dates.
Date Created: 6/8/2001
Volume: 20
Page Start: 35
Page End: 46