The Thousand Mountains of Borneo (2024)

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Forests of Borneo Forest location and brief description

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Located in the equatorial region of the Pacific Ocean, Borneo is the third largest island in the world. The island is nearly 740,000 km 2 , sparsely populated by humans, and one of the world's most important biodiversity centres. Three countries occupy Borneo – Brunei Darussalam, Indonesia and Malaysia. The Malaysian region of Borneo is divided into two states, Sarawak and Sabah, and the largest part of Borneo (72,000 km 2), belonging to Indonesia, is called Kalimantan. Borneo contains a wide variety of forest habitats, including mangroves, peat swamps and freshwater swamp forests, mixed dipterocarp forests, montane forests and forests on limestone and ultrabasic soils. The island is also home to the largest heath forests in Southeast Asia. The tropical rainforest of the area popularly known as Heart of Borneo covers almost 30 per cent of the island and represents one of the largest contiguous forests remaining in all of Southeast Asia. Totalling approximately 24 million hectares, these forests possess staggeringly high endemism levels across all groups of plants and animals. They are one of the only two places on Earth where orang utans, elephants and rhinos still co-exist, and currently large enough to maintain viable populations of these species. The central highlands are the location of the headwaters of Borneo's major rivers, the protection of which is critical in ensuring clean water and food (fish) supplies to a large number of human settlements.

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In January 1931, intrigued by a sketch map dated 1903 of Houaphanh Province, within the then-French Protectorate of Laos, on which a local notable had written “cut stones”, the Hanoi-based French archaeologist Madeleine Colani initiated an expedition to Houaphanh’s Muang Peun region, some 100 km northeast of the Plain of Jars, where Colani had undertaken a major archaeological survey two years earlier. Her findings at both sites, including extensive field notes, maps, and photographs, were published by EFEO in 1935, entitled ‘Mégalithes de HautLaos’ (Hua Pan, Tran Nin); the two-volume edition was neither substantively translated into either Lao or English nor subsequently revised or republished. The formal conservation process for the Houaphanh menhirs has now been underway for nearly twenty years, so what has actually been accomplished during this period, and how do the material condition of the landscape and the artefacts compare to the situation between 1999 and 2002 when the aut...

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Liana Chua

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Borneo has long been described as place of tremendous cultural, political, ecological, environmental and other diversity. This is reflected in the pluralistic landscape of Borneo studies, in which researchers in different fields have (by and large) not talked a great deal to each other. In this keynote, I draw on long-term anthropological research in Borneo—first on Bidayuh Christianity, ethno-religious politics and resettlement in Sarawak, and more recently on the global nexus of orangutan conservation—to argue for a more open and connected approach to scholarship in and of Borneo. Thinking through the methodological and conceptual challenges posed by what anthropologists and human geographers sometimes call ‘more-than-human’ encounters, I shall suggest that Borneo studies needs to cultivate its own ‘more-than- ‘ approaches in order to grapple with the complex realities shaping the island’s present and future. Doing so does not simply mean talking across disciplines and playing up diversity. Rather, it means creating new openings and connections involving both humans and non-humans, as well as engaging seriously with voices and presences that have historically remained marginal to our scholarly exchanges.

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Beyond the green myth : Borneo's hunter-gatherers in the twenty-first century

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2007, Beyond the Green Myth. Borneo’s Hunter-Gatherers in the Twenty-First Century

Bernard Sellato, Peter Sercombe

P.G. Sercombe & B. Sellato (eds), Copenhagen: NIAS Press, NIAS Studies in Asian Topics, No. 37, 384 p.

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The Thousand Mountains of Borneo (2024)
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