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Ancestry

Ancestry and Indigenous Landownership in PNG

Ryan Schram

ANTH 2654: Forms of Families

15 October 2015

Available at: http://anthro.rschram.org/2654/11

Lecture outline

  • “Turn off the tap”
    • The “chiefs” of Hela Province, Papua New Guinea want to cut off the gas pipeline.
    • The “Kohonoleng clan” of Manus Province wants “spin off” benefits from the detention centre.
    • Clans can incorporate themselves as Incorporated Landowning Groups (ILGs).
    • Is this “entification”: the making of new entities? Are these groups real?
  • The politics of landownership in PNG
    • Everyone is a villager, everyone is a landowner.
    • Being a landowner means you have a right to participate in politics.
  • The colonial context of contemporary landownership
    • The colonization of New Guinea included protection of native land tenure.
    • Governing people of New Guinea meant indentifying who was there, and where they lived.
    • Patrol officers assumed they would find stable, clearly bounded groups, but few existed.
    • Anthropologists found “segmentary societies” in the New Guinea Highlands, and they assumed they would all be organized in terms of unilineal descent, just like in Africa (“African models in the New Guinea Highlands”).
      • Fasu people studied by Emma Gilberthorpe are a good example of a society based on place instead of descent.
      • Fasu people and others have had to document their ownership of their places in terms that make sense to the state.
  • Is registration of landownership “reification”?
    • Dialectic as a theory of change: thesis, antithesis, synthesis.
2654/11.1444799005.txt.gz · Last modified: 2015/10/13 22:03 by Ryan Schram (admin)