The illegal as mundane: Researching border-crossing practices in Indonesia’s Riau Islands

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Abstract

Ways of studying illegal behaviour are important in the context of Indonesia, a country well known for its failure to deal adequately with the corruption that permeates every level of society. They are perhaps even more salient at the peripheries of the nation-state where government agencies struggle to contain the illegal practices that necessarily emerge where nation-states meet. This article reflects on our experiences conducting a decade-long study of an Indonesian borderlands that, while not initially focused on illegality, came–as a consequence of its ubiquity–to include it as a key construct. This experience led us to grapple not only with methodological questions about how to research illegality but also with assumptions about what illegality is and does. We argue that the only way to recognise and account for the quotidian nature of many kinds of illegal activity in the borderlands is to eschew an ethnography of exception in favour of an ethnography of the mundane.

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APA

Ford, M., & Lyons, L. (2020). The illegal as mundane: Researching border-crossing practices in Indonesia’s Riau Islands. Indonesia and the Malay World, 48(140), 24–39. https://doi.org/10.1080/13639811.2019.1648006

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