Type | Working Paper |
Title | Transitional gap of governance: Social change and urban vulnerability in post-1999 East Timor |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | |
URL | http://www.tlstudies.org/pdfs/TLSA Conf 2013/Volume 2 individual papers/vol2_paper32.pdf |
Abstract | The purpose of this paper is to shed light on socio-economic changes in post-1999 East Timor, and to elucidate the way in which human vulnerability emerged under the international state-building. This paper draws attention to the ‘transitional gap of governance,’ or the emerging situation where neither state institutions, nor kin-based community networks, function appropriately to protect the security and welfare of individuals and families. While the legal and institutional framework of the new state has struggled to penetrate the society, rapid socio-demographic changes weakened customary governance, which used to thrive in kin-based communities of East Timor. It is in such a ‘gap of governance’ where people are left in vulnerable circumstance and a new form of human insecurity emerges. Since the late 2000s, the state-society relationship has become the centre of the debate in literature. It was seen as critical to better understand the ‘success’ or ‘failure’ of international and national efforts to realise sustainable peace in the country. Some commentators have criticised that international statebuilding activities concentrated their focus on the capital city Dili and failed to account for the significance of rural areas where more than 80 per cent of the population resided (Grenfell 2008; Matsuno 2008). Others have also argued that the modernist nature of legal and institutional frameworks ignored the plurality of laws in East Timor and excluded customary governance that thrived at the grass-root level in the country (Grenfell 2006; McWilliam 2008). While drawing upon the body of existing literature, this paper emphasises the significance of the socio-demographic transition triggered by the economic changes under the international statebuilding. Most importantly, this paper points out that weakening of kin-based communities and support networks within the communities have led to a new form of vulnerability among those who reside in urban areas. |
» | Timor-Leste - Population and Housing Census 2010 |