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Juggling Money : Financial Self-Help Organizations and Social Security in Yogyakarta / Hotze Lont.

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: Brill Book Archive Part 1, ISBN: 9789004472495 | Verhandelingen van het Koninklijk Instituut voor Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde ; 221.Publisher: Leiden ; Boston : BRILL, 2005Description: 1 online resourceContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9004488421
  • 9789067182409
  • 9067182400
  • 9789004488427
Other title:
  • Financial Self-Help Organizations and Social Security in Yogyakarta
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 368.409598 23
LOC classification:
  • HD7224
Online resources: Summary: This social-anthropological study, focusing on urban Indonesia, examines a variety of financial self-help organizations ( arisan and simpan pinjam ) as instruments for dealing with financial difficulties related to illness, death, and unemployment. The author devotes ample attention to the embedding of these associations, and their participants, in a changing socio-economic and cultural environment, and to the important issues of agency, exclusion, trust, and social conflict. The book not only explains the workings of these fascinating collective arrangements, but also provides an interesting window on living conditions and social relations in an Indonesian urban community. Indonesianists will find here a detailed description of an omnipresent aspect of Javanese socio-economic life, the only thorough analytical study of which has become somewhat outdated (C. Geertz, The rotating credit association: An instrument for development , Cambridge 1956). In this UN Year of Microcredit, experts on informal finance and microfinance will value the explanation of the workings of financial self-help organizations, and its policy implications. The book critically examines the popular notion of financial self-help organizations as vehicles for development and nurseries for social capital.
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Includes bibliographical references and index.

This social-anthropological study, focusing on urban Indonesia, examines a variety of financial self-help organizations ( arisan and simpan pinjam ) as instruments for dealing with financial difficulties related to illness, death, and unemployment. The author devotes ample attention to the embedding of these associations, and their participants, in a changing socio-economic and cultural environment, and to the important issues of agency, exclusion, trust, and social conflict. The book not only explains the workings of these fascinating collective arrangements, but also provides an interesting window on living conditions and social relations in an Indonesian urban community. Indonesianists will find here a detailed description of an omnipresent aspect of Javanese socio-economic life, the only thorough analytical study of which has become somewhat outdated (C. Geertz, The rotating credit association: An instrument for development , Cambridge 1956). In this UN Year of Microcredit, experts on informal finance and microfinance will value the explanation of the workings of financial self-help organizations, and its policy implications. The book critically examines the popular notion of financial self-help organizations as vehicles for development and nurseries for social capital.

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