Towards "good" native land governance: an evaluation in Sarawak, Malaysia.

Sarawak is the largest state in Malaysia, where two-thirds of the population are Indigenous. This study aims to evaluate, through the lens of good governance principles, the current practice of the Sarawak State’s formal land governance of lands associated with Native Customary Rights (hereafter kno...

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Main Authors: Choon, Tan Liat, Liang, Toh Ming, Seng, Looi kam, Vern, Tan Wee, Ujang, Muhamad Uznir, Chin, Thoo Ai, Azri, Nor Suhaibah, Kathitasapathy, Shanmugapathy A. L.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Scholarship at Western 2023
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Online Access:http://eprints.utm.my/105083/1/TanLiatChoon2023_TowardsGoodNativeLandGovernance.pdf
http://eprints.utm.my/105083/
http://dx.doi.org/10.18584/iipj.2023.14.1.13873
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spelling my.utm.1050832024-04-02T06:51:24Z http://eprints.utm.my/105083/ Towards "good" native land governance: an evaluation in Sarawak, Malaysia. Choon, Tan Liat Liang, Toh Ming Seng, Looi kam Vern, Tan Wee Ujang, Muhamad Uznir Chin, Thoo Ai Azri, Nor Suhaibah Kathitasapathy, Shanmugapathy A. L. TH434-437 Quantity surveying Sarawak is the largest state in Malaysia, where two-thirds of the population are Indigenous. This study aims to evaluate, through the lens of good governance principles, the current practice of the Sarawak State’s formal land governance of lands associated with Native Customary Rights (hereafter known as Native land governance). Being quantitative in nature, this study conceptualises an evaluation framework for good governance principles as applied to Native land governance. Next, this study empirically tests out the framework by adopting a multi-criteria decision-making tool known as The Technique for Order of Preference by Similarity to Ideal Solution (TOPSIS). TOPSIS analysis enables the integration of perceptions between State/private groups and Indigenous groups. The output of the TOPSIS analysis is summarised in a strength, weakness, opportunity, and threat (SWOT) format according to the TOPSIS closeness value. Unfortunately, results show that the weaknesses outnumber the strengths in Sarawak’s Native land governance. Among these issues, Indigenous respondents highlight major issues with the Sarawak land registry’s efficiency in delivering outcomes that are equitable for Indigenous land rights. This study ends with recommendations on how the state of Sarawak can move towards compliance with good governance principles in relation to lands associated with Native Customary Rights. Scholarship at Western 2023-04 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://eprints.utm.my/105083/1/TanLiatChoon2023_TowardsGoodNativeLandGovernance.pdf Choon, Tan Liat and Liang, Toh Ming and Seng, Looi kam and Vern, Tan Wee and Ujang, Muhamad Uznir and Chin, Thoo Ai and Azri, Nor Suhaibah and Kathitasapathy, Shanmugapathy A. L. (2023) Towards "good" native land governance: an evaluation in Sarawak, Malaysia. International Indigenous Policy Journal, 14 (1). pp. 1-25. ISSN 1916-5781 http://dx.doi.org/10.18584/iipj.2023.14.1.13873 DOI: 10.18584/iipj.2023.14.1.13873
institution Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
building UTM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
content_source UTM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://eprints.utm.my/
language English
topic TH434-437 Quantity surveying
spellingShingle TH434-437 Quantity surveying
Choon, Tan Liat
Liang, Toh Ming
Seng, Looi kam
Vern, Tan Wee
Ujang, Muhamad Uznir
Chin, Thoo Ai
Azri, Nor Suhaibah
Kathitasapathy, Shanmugapathy A. L.
Towards "good" native land governance: an evaluation in Sarawak, Malaysia.
description Sarawak is the largest state in Malaysia, where two-thirds of the population are Indigenous. This study aims to evaluate, through the lens of good governance principles, the current practice of the Sarawak State’s formal land governance of lands associated with Native Customary Rights (hereafter known as Native land governance). Being quantitative in nature, this study conceptualises an evaluation framework for good governance principles as applied to Native land governance. Next, this study empirically tests out the framework by adopting a multi-criteria decision-making tool known as The Technique for Order of Preference by Similarity to Ideal Solution (TOPSIS). TOPSIS analysis enables the integration of perceptions between State/private groups and Indigenous groups. The output of the TOPSIS analysis is summarised in a strength, weakness, opportunity, and threat (SWOT) format according to the TOPSIS closeness value. Unfortunately, results show that the weaknesses outnumber the strengths in Sarawak’s Native land governance. Among these issues, Indigenous respondents highlight major issues with the Sarawak land registry’s efficiency in delivering outcomes that are equitable for Indigenous land rights. This study ends with recommendations on how the state of Sarawak can move towards compliance with good governance principles in relation to lands associated with Native Customary Rights.
format Article
author Choon, Tan Liat
Liang, Toh Ming
Seng, Looi kam
Vern, Tan Wee
Ujang, Muhamad Uznir
Chin, Thoo Ai
Azri, Nor Suhaibah
Kathitasapathy, Shanmugapathy A. L.
author_facet Choon, Tan Liat
Liang, Toh Ming
Seng, Looi kam
Vern, Tan Wee
Ujang, Muhamad Uznir
Chin, Thoo Ai
Azri, Nor Suhaibah
Kathitasapathy, Shanmugapathy A. L.
author_sort Choon, Tan Liat
title Towards "good" native land governance: an evaluation in Sarawak, Malaysia.
title_short Towards "good" native land governance: an evaluation in Sarawak, Malaysia.
title_full Towards "good" native land governance: an evaluation in Sarawak, Malaysia.
title_fullStr Towards "good" native land governance: an evaluation in Sarawak, Malaysia.
title_full_unstemmed Towards "good" native land governance: an evaluation in Sarawak, Malaysia.
title_sort towards "good" native land governance: an evaluation in sarawak, malaysia.
publisher Scholarship at Western
publishDate 2023
url http://eprints.utm.my/105083/1/TanLiatChoon2023_TowardsGoodNativeLandGovernance.pdf
http://eprints.utm.my/105083/
http://dx.doi.org/10.18584/iipj.2023.14.1.13873
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score 13.160551