EIA/Amdal in risk society: A study in developing country Indonesia

Although coal mining activities have an Environmental impact assessment EIA/Amdal, these activities still pose serious risks to communities in rural Indonesia. This study links EIA/Amdal with the social context of a risk society. This study aims to evaluate the legitimacy of Amdal for coal mining in...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kumayza, Toni, Hariyadi, Sundek
Format: Conference or Workshop Item
Language:English
Published: 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://repository.ugm.ac.id/284350/1/Kumayza_SP.pdf
_version_ 1797037839319302144
author Kumayza, Toni
Hariyadi, Sundek
author_facet Kumayza, Toni
Hariyadi, Sundek
author_sort Kumayza, Toni
collection UGM
description Although coal mining activities have an Environmental impact assessment EIA/Amdal, these activities still pose serious risks to communities in rural Indonesia. This study links EIA/Amdal with the social context of a risk society. This study aims to evaluate the legitimacy of Amdal for coal mining in Indonesia. The legitimacy of the Amdal for coal mining is based on the beliefs of experts, science, and technology (Rational model). The survey and interviews involved stakeholders in 6 coal mining villages and the Indonesian Mining Experts Association (PERHAPI). The results show that rural stakeholders are increasingly distrustful of Amdal (rational model) in avoiding risk. Meanwhile, mining expert groups still rely on rational models in making environmental decisions.
first_indexed 2024-03-14T00:10:06Z
format Conference or Workshop Item
id oai:generic.eprints.org:284350
institution Universiti Gadjah Mada
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-14T00:10:06Z
publishDate 2022
record_format dspace
spelling oai:generic.eprints.org:2843502023-12-15T06:23:35Z https://repository.ugm.ac.id/284350/ EIA/Amdal in risk society: A study in developing country Indonesia Kumayza, Toni Hariyadi, Sundek Policy and Administration Public Administration Although coal mining activities have an Environmental impact assessment EIA/Amdal, these activities still pose serious risks to communities in rural Indonesia. This study links EIA/Amdal with the social context of a risk society. This study aims to evaluate the legitimacy of Amdal for coal mining in Indonesia. The legitimacy of the Amdal for coal mining is based on the beliefs of experts, science, and technology (Rational model). The survey and interviews involved stakeholders in 6 coal mining villages and the Indonesian Mining Experts Association (PERHAPI). The results show that rural stakeholders are increasingly distrustful of Amdal (rational model) in avoiding risk. Meanwhile, mining expert groups still rely on rational models in making environmental decisions. 2022-12-12 Conference or Workshop Item PeerReviewed application/pdf en https://repository.ugm.ac.id/284350/1/Kumayza_SP.pdf Kumayza, Toni and Hariyadi, Sundek (2022) EIA/Amdal in risk society: A study in developing country Indonesia. In: 9th International Conference on Sustainable Agriculture and Environment, ICSAE 2022, 24-25 Agustus 2022, Surakarta, Virtual. https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/1755-1315/1114/1/012024
spellingShingle Policy and Administration
Public Administration
Kumayza, Toni
Hariyadi, Sundek
EIA/Amdal in risk society: A study in developing country Indonesia
title EIA/Amdal in risk society: A study in developing country Indonesia
title_full EIA/Amdal in risk society: A study in developing country Indonesia
title_fullStr EIA/Amdal in risk society: A study in developing country Indonesia
title_full_unstemmed EIA/Amdal in risk society: A study in developing country Indonesia
title_short EIA/Amdal in risk society: A study in developing country Indonesia
title_sort eia amdal in risk society a study in developing country indonesia
topic Policy and Administration
Public Administration
url https://repository.ugm.ac.id/284350/1/Kumayza_SP.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT kumayzatoni eiaamdalinrisksocietyastudyindevelopingcountryindonesia
AT hariyadisundek eiaamdalinrisksocietyastudyindevelopingcountryindonesia