SCLS
Volume 3 Issue 1 June 2025

UNPACKING THE INDEPENDENCE OF THE INDIGENOUS PEOPLES BILL: A CRITIQUE

Ricca Anggraeni (Unknown)



Article Info

Publish Date
30 Jun 2025

Abstract

Although the Indigenous Peoples Bill has been included in the National Legislation Programme since 2015, it has not yet entered the discussion stage at the time of writing. The bill has not been considered a concrete necessity for indigenous peoples. Regulation of Masyarakat Hukum Adat in the form of regional regulations is sufficient to recognise their existence within Indonesian society. However, Indigenous Peoples need protection to guarantee their rights, including those relating to natural resources and land, culture, and self-determination. Therefore, what is needed is more than just administrative recognition. The aim of this paper is to criticise the stagnation of the Indigenous Peoples Bill and to promote its enactment. This paper uses the normative legal research method to achieve its objectives, namely, to criticise the stagnation of the bill due to conflicts of interest in development and the underrepresentation of indigenous peoples in the power structure.

Copyrights © 2025






Journal Info

Abbrev

SCLS

Publisher

Subject

Law, Crime, Criminology & Criminal Justice

Description

Sriwijaya Crimen Legal Studies (SCLS) is a journal in the field of law that publishes articles which include but not limited to articles with the themes: Administrative Crime, Juvenile Delinquent, Criminal Anthropology, Criminal Sociology, Penology, Criminal Psychology, Environmental Crime, Islamic ...