Udayana Journal of Law and Culture
Vol 8 No 1 (2024)

Legal Empowering the Saniri: A Pillar of Harmony in Post-Conflict Ambon

Yustina Trihoni Nalesti Dewi (Faculty of Law and Communication, Soegijapranata Catholic University)
Andreas Pandiangan (Faculty of Law and Communication, Soegijapranata Catholic University)
Jonathan Kwik (Amsterdam Law School, the University of Amsterdam)
Tonny Donald Pariela (Faculty of Social and Political Science, Pattimura University)
Aholiab Watloly (Faculty of Social and Political Science, Pattimura University)
Abidin Wakano (Ambon Reconciliation and Mediation Center, Ambon Islamic State University)
Andreas Ryan Sanjaya (Faculty of Law and Communication, Soegijapranata Catholic University)



Article Info

Publish Date
31 Jan 2024

Abstract

Due to the lasting impact of the previous authoritarian system, decentralization has yet to reinstate Ambon's customary law-based governance model fully. However, it was formally acknowledged by the national and Ambon City's regional legislation. This article examines the need to empower Saniri, a quasi-governmental body in a traditional village with close ties to underprivileged groups, in conflict resolution services in Ambon. Data was collected through a literature study of historical sources from the nineteenth century and then analyzed based on qualitative field research. Extensive interviews were conducted based on snowball and purposive samplings. Results from the field study were subsequently discovered and deliberated through Focus Group Discussions. It suggests that the current political landscape is permissive to empower Saniri in conflict resolution mechanisms. Therefore, the legal and political efforts must be sufficient to accommodate Saniri's character and support its contribution to post-conflict reconciliation. More attention is required to empower Saniri legally and politically in a manner consistent with its nature to maximize its role as a harmonizing medium.

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Journal Info

Abbrev

UJLC

Publisher

Subject

Arts Humanities Law, Crime, Criminology & Criminal Justice Social Sciences

Description

Udayana Journal of Law and Culture (UJLC) is hence created by reflecting the aforementioned phenomenon. This journal offers a recovery of the landscape of the science of law by means of recovering the position of ideology as an aspect of science of law analysis, with particular in analyzing the ...