Most of Indonesian population live in rural areas, and the majority of poor people also live in rural areas, namely 13.47% in rural and 7.26 in urban. In the past decades, rural communities as well as the ecology have changed fundamentally. Many factors contribute to this transformation: development programs from the government as well as from private and NGOs; the diffusion of information technology; the development of transportation facilities; the rise of education and health levels, interaction with "outsiders", and so on.
A main driving factor for rural development has been agrarian liberalization. This can be seen in the development of transnational plantations, which trigger land grab and rise of land demand. Development trough liberalization also had a negative impact, since the development of modern and industrialized agriculture affected the environment, and the expansion of plantations caused changes in the agricultural systems of villages and the life orientation of local communities. Interventions in villages by private companies, intermediary institutions no doubt have brought a structural transformations in rural live: local institutions, livelihood systems, population structures, ecosystems, and relation to the land.
Unfortunately, the social, economic, cultural, and ecological transformation of the rural community not always produces improvement of quality of life for the rural community. At the same time, information and data related to rural transformations are scarcely available at research institutions, universities, NGOs, private enterprises.
Rural Socio-Economic Transformation: Agrarian, Ecology, Communication and Community, Development Perspectives discusses many aspects of the social, economic, cultural, and ecological transformation of rural life in Indonesia, and is of interest to academics and policy makers interested or involved in these areas.
About the Author: Dr. Rilus is a lecturer in the School of Rural Sociology, Department of Communication and Community Development Sciences, Bogor Agricultural University. His research focus on rural sociology, social movement, and also fishermen conflict. Dr. Rilus completed his PhD in Sociology Departemen, University Indonesia.
Dr. Arya Hadi Dharmawan is lecturer and Chair of the Department of Communication Science and Community Development at Bogor Agricultural University. He teaches courses on natural resource management, human ecology, social movement and rural community dynamics and sociology, among others.
Dr. Djuara is a lecturer in the School of Communication and Agricultural Extension, Department of Communication and Community Development Sciences, Bogor Agricultural University. Dr. Djuara completed his PhD in Development Communication, University of the Philippines Los Baños. His research focus on development communication, community development, and Information Communication Technology for Development (ICT4D).
Annisa Utami Seminar is an assistant lecturer in the School of Development Communication, Bogor Agricultural University. She completed her PhD in Communication for Development, Bogor Agricultural University. Her research focuses on communication in social movement, global communication, social and behavioral change communication, food sovereignty, and also health issues in rural areas.