Academic literature on the topic 'Orang National Park'

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Journal articles on the topic "Orang National Park"

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Chakdar, Biswajit, Hilloljyoti Singha, and Manabendra Ray Choudhury. "Bird community of Rajiv Gandhi Orang National Park, Assam." Journal of Asia-Pacific Biodiversity 12, no. 4 (December 2019): 498–507. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.japb.2019.07.003.

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Yusuf, M., and Syafrial Syafrial. "A Big Battle: The State vs. Indigenous People (Case Study in Jambi Province)." Jurnal Ilmu Sosial dan Ilmu Politik 23, no. 1 (August 14, 2019): 59. http://dx.doi.org/10.22146/jsp.37568.

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The change in designation of Bukit Duabelas area into Bukit Duabelas National Park in Jambi province raises a conflict between the national park official who was ruling the zonation system in the national park and the Orang Rimba people who have lived there for many years. The decision of the protected area aims to preserve the life and culture of Orang Rimba. However, zoning rules in the field are interpreted as an effort to limit space and access to the forest resources for Orang Rimba who have traditionally utilized them. This research uses a case study approach to explore the dynamics of conflict on the protected area. The results of the study show that conflicts in national park management are very dynamic because of shifting disagreement about the protection area. The conflicts began with debates about the zoning system which led into the fight for access to the park resources which were contested over the concept of national parks and customary forests. This paper argues the battle over the national park was not only about contested natural resources but also was a fight for authority and power between the state and indigenous people over the concept of park management.
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Sarma, Pranjit Kumar, B. S. Mipun, Bibhab Kumar Talukdar, Rajeev Kumar, and Ajit Kumar Basumatary. "Evaluation of Habitat Suitability for Rhino (Rhinoceros unicornis) in Orang National Park Using Geo-Spatial Tools." ISRN Ecology 2011 (May 23, 2011): 1–9. http://dx.doi.org/10.5402/2011/498258.

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Orang National Park (Orang NP) is one of the important conservation areas in the Brahmaputra valley within North East India biogeographic zone covering an area of 78.8 km2. It is one of the prime habitats of one horned rhino (Rhinoceros unicornis) in its distribution range in south Asia. Satellite imagery of November 2008 was used to evaluate the rhino habitat pattern in the park. A habitat suitability model for one horned rhino was prepared using primary and secondary sources. Result indicates that out of total geographical area of the park 25.85% is covered by woodland. About 26.06% is covered by wet alluvial grassland and 17.97% is covered by dry savannah grassland. Similarly degraded grassland is covering 15.23% and eastern seasonal swamp forest is covering 1.72% of the park. About 8.22% of the park is covered by water body and 6.83% is covered by sandy area. The habitat suitability model for rhino shows that 25.13% of the park is most suitable habitat for rhino, 13.62% is moderately suitable and 61.23% is less suitable habitat for rhino in the park. This information will help the park managers to conserve rhino and its habitat in Orang NP.
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Walyoto, Sri. "Pendekatan Pendidikan Orang Rimbo Dan Masyarakat Sekitar Guna Mendukung Pariwisata Budaya Adat." INFERENSI 11, no. 1 (June 1, 2017): 207. http://dx.doi.org/10.18326/infsl3.v11i1.207-228.

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This study aims to determine the response of Rimbo people and the surrounding community about the establishment of Bukit Duabelas National Park. The study also estimates the value of tourism and culture among domestic tourists to the object using the Travel Cost Method (TCM). The results obtained by consumer surplus (CS) as much as US $ 2.45 per visitor per visit. The result of CS value of each visitor shows the tourism services in the region does not provide high benefits to tourists. Bukit Duabelas National Park can be a domestic and international eco-cultural tourism destination and welfare improvement. It takes education awareness of tourism and traditional culture of Rimbo people and the surrounding community to achieve it.
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Chakdar, Biswajit, Manabendra Ray Choudhury, Panna Deb, and Hilloljyoti Singha. "Slender-Billed Babbler Turdoides longirostris in Rajiv Gandhi Orang National Park, Assam, India." Bombay Natural History Society (BNHS) 111, no. 3 (December 1, 2014): 222. http://dx.doi.org/10.17087/jbnhs/2014/v111i3/82439.

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Kuswanda, Wanda, and Sriyanti P. Barus. "Characteristic and Diversity Vegetation of Bukit Tiga Puluh National Park as Dietary Sources for Reintroduced Sumatran Orang Utan (Pongo abelii Lesson)." Buletin Plasma Nutfah 25, no. 1 (August 20, 2019): 63. http://dx.doi.org/10.21082/blpn.v25n1.2019.p63-76.

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<p>The population of Sumatran orang utan in natural habitat has been declined and threatened with extinction. The orang utanreintroduction program is expected to increase breeding and population in nature. This study aimed to analyze the important value index of vegetation as well as the diversity and abundance species of Bukit Tiga Puluh National Park (BTNP) as dietary sources for reintroduced Sumatran orang utan. The research was conducted during two years from 2015 to 2016. The data collection for flora characteristics is done through the vegetation analysis with strip transects method. Plots were selected by stratification method based on the resort management and the land cover, like primary and secondary forests. Total flora species on a plot of 2.8<br />ha were identified about 301 species. The highest variation found in Suo-Suo Resort (139 species) and the lowest in Talang Lakat Resort (82 species). The dominant species have been found were Eugenia grandiflora O. Berg, Macaranga lowii King ex Hook.f., Shore iliginosa Foxw., and Tarrietia rubiginosa Kostern. Vegetation chararacteristic to be identified were tree density of 350-552.5 individuals/ha, species diversity index of 2.86-4.19, and abundance index of 32.1087.35. It also identified that vegetation characteristic among resort and land cover were different (p &lt;0.05). Moreover, there were about 110 species of tree plants including of 31 families that found as dietary sources for orang utan and leaves became the highest plant parts which consumed by orang utans (41.8%) compared to other parts. Based on area size, ecosystem types as well as vegetation composition and variation, BTNP may support the increasing population of orang utans. However, there needs to be considered that other<br />aspects such as high human activity within the conservation area, particularly by Talang Mamak tribe communities, may cause unsuccessful achievement on reintroduction program of orang utan.</p>
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Banes, Graham L., Biruté M. F. Galdikas, and Linda Vigilant. "Male orang-utan bimaturism and reproductive success at Camp Leakey in Tanjung Puting National Park, Indonesia." Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 69, no. 11 (September 1, 2015): 1785–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00265-015-1991-0.

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Bustam, Mohamad. "Peran Lembaga Swadaya Masyarakat dalam Penetapan Taman Nasional Lore Lindu: Studi Yayasan Tanah Merdeka dalam Memperjuangkan Hak Masyarakat Katu." Journal of Social Development Studies 2, no. 1 (June 11, 2021): 52–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.22146/jsds.1358.

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Lembaga swadaya masyarakat ini berupaya memperjuangkan hak komunitas lokal dalam isu kebijakan penetapan kawasan taman nasional. Tujuan penulisan ini mengidentifikasi peran dan strategi Yayasan Tanah Merdeka (YTM) dalam memperjuangkan hak komunitas Orang Katu atas penetapan Kawasan Taman Nasional Lore Lindu Sulawesi Tengah. Data dikumpulkan menggunakan metode kualitatif dan disajikan secara deskriptif. Studi mengungkapkan YTM memainkan peran strategis dalam menciptakan hegemoni tandingan atas kebijakan penetapan kawasan Taman nasional Lore Lindu di wilayah komunitas Orang Katu. Hal ini dilakukan dengan membentuk kesadaran kolektif, melibatkan komunitas dalam gerakan akar rumput, mengembangkan strategi perjuangan melalui penyusunan dokumen pengelolaan sumber daya alam berbasis pengetahuan lokal serta, penggunaan terminologi masyarakat adat sebagai instrumen perjuangan yang dihubungkan dengan wacana hak global sehingga menjadi kekuatan yang konstitutif dalam arena politik pengelolaan sumber daya alam pada tingkat lokal. Kata kunci: Lembaga swadaya masyarakat, gerakan masyarakat adat, kebijakan taman nasional This non-governmental organization seeks to fight for the rights of local communities in the policy issue of setting the national park area. This paper aims to identify the role of Yayasan Tanah Merdeka (YTM) in the struggling rights of the Orang Katu community for the establishment of the Lore Lindu National Park Area. Data is collected using qualitative methods and presented descriptively. The study revealed that YTM played a strategic role in creating counter-hegemony over the policy of establishing Lore Lindu National Park in the Katu community area. Conducted by establishing collective awareness, involving communities in grassroots movements, the strategy is developed through the preparation of documents on the management of natural resources based on local knowledge as well as, the use of indigenous terminology that is connected with global rights discourse to become a constitutive force in the political arena of natural resource management at the local level. Keywords: non-government organization, indigenous movement, national park policy
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Perawati, Santi. "Mini Review: Traditional Plants Medicine of Suku Anak Dalam Jambi." Riset Informasi Kesehatan 6, no. 2 (December 13, 2017): 102. http://dx.doi.org/10.30644/rik.v6i2.92.

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Indonesia is a country with many tribes and cultures, one of which Suku Anak Dalam (SAD) in Jambi province. SAD also known as Orang Rimba, they are semi-nomadic life, moving from one place to another in Bukit Dua Belas National Park area. Each tribe is headed by Temenggung as a chief master for treatment diseases using plants. Method for collect data by ethnopharmacology observation survey some plant in Orang Rimba at Bukit Dua Belas National Park Jambi for infection diseases treatment, and literature search about the plants. SAD scantily clad it easier making for skin direct contact with environmental it cause skin infection extremely easy to occur. They use some plant for treat infection diseases, several disease including inflammation, diarrhea, measles, and malaria. Key Words: Suku Anak Dalam Jambi, infection, inflammation, diarrhea, measles, malaria
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Muchlis, F., D. P. Lubis, R. A. Kinseng, and A. Tasman. "COMMUNITY RADIO ROLES AS PUBLIC SPHERE STRUGGLING ORANG RIMBA RIGHTS FROM BUKIT DUABELAS NATIONAL PARK (JAMBI PROVINCE, INDONESIA)." Russian Journal of Agricultural and Socio-Economic Sciences 70, no. 10 (October 30, 2017): 18–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.18551/rjoas.2017-10.03.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Orang National Park"

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Stambolic-Robb, Anna. "Geophagy amongst free-ranging Sumatran orang-utans, Pongo pygmaeus abelii, of Gunung Leuser National Park and ex-captive Bornean orang-utans, Pongo pygmaeus pygmaeus, of Sungai Wain Forest, Indonesia." Thesis, National Library of Canada = Bibliothèque nationale du Canada, 1997. http://www.collectionscanada.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk2/ftp04/mq22838.pdf.

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Banes, Graham L. "Genetic analysis of social structure, mate choice, and reproductive success in the endangered wild orang-utans of Tanjung Puting National Park, Central Kalimantan, Republic of Indonesia." Thesis, University of Cambridge, 2013. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.608063.

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Books on the topic "Orang National Park"

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Parasher, Dushyant. Bodoland: Back to the future. Guwahati: Bodoland Territorial Council in collaboration with Red River, an imprint of LBS Publications, 2010.

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Rose, Marques, Foulds H. Eliot 1960-, and Olmsted Center for Landscape Preservation (U.S.), eds. Cultural landscape report for Glenmont: Thomas Edison National Historical Park, West Orange, New Jersey. Boston: U.S. Dept. of the Interior, National Park Service, 2010.

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Monkey farm: A history of the Yerkes Laboratories of Primate Biology, Orange Park, Florida, 1930-1965. Lewisburg, PA: Bucknell University Press, 2006.

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Canyonlands National Park and Orange Cliffs unit of Glen Canyon National Recreation Area: Environmental assessment for backcountry management plan. [Denver, Colo.?: U.S. Dept. of the Interior, National Park Service?, 1993.

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National Geographic Windows on Literacy: Year 2 Orange Independent Reading Easy Order Pack (National Geographic Windows on Literacy). Rigby Educational Publishers, 2003.

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National Geographic Windows on Literacy: Year 2 Orange Guided Reading Easy Order Pack (National Geographic Windows on Literacy). Rigby Educational Publishers, 2003.

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Dewsbury, Donald A. Monkey Farm: A History of the Yerkes Laboratories of Primate Biology, Orange Park, Florida, 1930-1965. Bucknell University Press, 2005.

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Book chapters on the topic "Orang National Park"

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Mary, P. P., Radha Raman Sinha, Awadhesh Kumar, Mintu Medhi, Gautam Narayan, and Parag Deka. "Habitat Characteristics of the Critically Endangered Pigmy Hog (Porcula salvania) of Manas National Park and Rajiv Gandhi Orang National Park in Assam, Northeast India." In Knowledge Systems of Societies for Adaptation and Mitigation of Impacts of Climate Change, 405–21. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-36143-2_24.

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Lane, Belden C. "Justice: The Meramec River at Times Beach and Mohandas Gandhi." In Backpacking with the Saints. Oxford University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199927814.003.0025.

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The spring-fed Meramec River wanders for 218 miles through six Missouri counties before it flows into the Mississippi eighteen miles south of St. Louis. It cuts across the northeastern corner of the Ozark Plateau, carving out bluffs of white dolomite limestone along its way. The stream passes by Onondaga Cave, Meramec State Park, and Meramec Caverns, becoming a lazy river fed by smaller tributaries and floated by weekend adventurers. Overhanging sycamores and cottonwoods crowd its banks. Springs and caves invite floaters to tie up their canoes and explore. Mussel beds are plentiful, as are crappie, rainbow trout, and channel cat. The name “Meramec,” in fact, comes from an Algonquin word meaning “ugly fish” or “catfish.” I’ve put the kayak into the water at the river’s Allenton access south of I-44 near Eureka, Missouri. Paddling eight miles downstream, I’ve stopped for the night just past the old Route 66 bridge near Times Beach. Today Times Beach is a ghost town, but it’s still remembered as the site of the worst environmental disaster in Missouri history. In the early 1970s, the country’s largest civilian exposure to dioxin (TCDD) occurred here along the banks of the Meramec. Waste oil containing the toxic chemical used in making Agent Orange was spread on the town streets in order to keep down the dust. The Environmental Protection Agency ended up buying out the entire town and incinerating everything. All that’s left of Times Beach today is what locals refer to as the “town mound,” a long raised embankment of incinerated dirt covered with grass. Since 1999, the site has been turned into Route 66 State Park, commemorating the Mother Road of public highways, begun in 1926. Historic Route 66 was the first of America’s cross-country highways, extending from Chicago to Los Angeles. It crossed the Meramec River at this point. Known as “The Main Street of America,” the road symbolized the nation’s fascination with the automobile and the movement west. “Get your kicks on Route Sixty- Six” crooned Nat King Cole in his R & B classic of the 1940s. Today the old concrete bridge over the river goes nowhere.
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Wohl, Ellen. "The Beaver Meadow on North St. Vrain Creek." In Saving the Dammed. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190943523.003.0003.

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There is a place, about a mile long by a thousand feet wide, that lies in the heart of the Southern Rocky Mountains in Colorado. Here at the eastern margin of Rocky Mountain National Park, along a creek known as North St. Vrain, everything comes together to create a bead strung along the thread of the creek. The bead is a wider portion of the valley, a place where the rushing waters diffuse into a maze of channels and seep into the sediment flooring the valley. In summer the willows and river birch growing across the valley bottom glow a brighter hue of green among the darker conifers. In winter, subtle shades of orange and gold suffuse the bare willow stems protruding above the drifted snow. The bead holds a complex spatial mosaic composed of active stream channels; abandoned channels; newly built beaver dams bristling with gnawed-end pieces of wood; long-abandoned dams now covered with willows and grasses but still forming linear berms; ponds gradually filling with sediment in which sedges and rushes grow thickly; and narrow canals and holes hidden by tall grass: all of these reflect the activities of generations of beavers. This is a beaver meadow. The bead of the beaver meadow is partly hidden, tucked into a fold in this landscape of conifers and mountains. The approach is from Route 7, which runs north–south across the undulating topography of creeks flowing east toward the plains. Coming from the north, as I commonly do, you turn west into the North St. Vrain watershed on an unpaved road perched on a dry terrace above the creek. The road appears to be on the valley bottom, but beyond the terrace the valley floor drops another 20 feet or so to the level at which the creek flows. I instinctively pause at this drop-off. The conifer forest on the terrace is open and the walking is easy. The beaver meadow looks impenetrable and nearly is. I have to stoop, wade, crawl, wind, and bend my way through it, insinuating my body among the densely growing willow stems and thigh-high grasses.
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Baralou, Evangelia, and Jill Shepherd. "Going Virtual." In Encyclopedia of Multimedia Technology and Networking, Second Edition, 581–86. IGI Global, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-60566-014-1.ch078.

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Virtuality is a socially constructed reality mediated by electronic media (Morse, 1998). Virtuality has overcome the stage of being considered a “false” reality, and is now being recognized as a process of becoming through information and communication technologies (ICTs), one of the main changing trends in a world in which ownership of assets is overrated. Organizations such as Amazon, Google, Cisco Systems, IBM, Intel Capital, Orange, and Hewlett-Packard are some of the innovative enterprises that have adopted virtual teams in order to accelerate access to global business. For example, most of the people working in product development in Orange Group, one of the UK’s leading mobile phone service providers, work in virtual teams. The World Bank is also using virtual teams that collaborate across national and technical boundaries to meet organizational objectives. IBM, in a way to open up the innovation process, is pulling a technology- enabled global team (around 100,000 people) together for the online equivalent of a town meeting (Business Week Online, 2006) that will hopefully lead to idea generation by the whole IBM population, and powerful innovations in IBM. Characterized mainly by the dimension of timespace distantiation (Giddens, 1991) virtuality has an impact on the nature and dynamics of knowledge creation (Thompson, 1995), innovation (MacKenzie, 2006), social identity (Papacharalambous & McCalman, 2000), and organizational culture (available at http://www.etw. org/2003/Archives/telework2001-proc.pdf). The relentless advancement of ICT, in terms both of new technology and the convergence of technology (e.g., multimedia), is making virtual networking the norm rather than the exception. Socially, virtual communities are more dispersed, have different power dynamics, are less hierarchical, tend to be shaped around special interests, and are open to multiple interpretations, when compared to face-to-face equivalents. To successfully manage virtual communities, these differences need first to be understood, second, the understanding related to varying organizational aims, and third, the contextualised understanding needs to be translated into appropriate managerial implications. In business terms, virtuality exists in the form of lifestyle choices (home-working), ways of working (global product development teams), new products (virtual theme parks), and new business models (e.g., Internet dating agencies). Socially, virtuality can take the form of talking to intelligent agents, combining reality and virtuality in surgery (e.g., using 3D imaging before and during an operation), or in policy making (e.g., combining research and engineering reports with real satellite images of a landscape with digital animations of being within that landscape, to aid environmental policy decisions). Defining virtuality today is easy in comparison with defining, understanding, and managing it on an ongoing basis. As the title “Going Virtual” suggests, virtuality is a matter of a phenomenon in the making, as we enter into it during our everyday lives, as the technology develops, and as society changes as a result of virtual existences. The relentless advances in the technical complexity which underlies virtual functionality and the speeding up and broadening of our lives as a consequence of virtuality, make for little time and inclination to reflect upon the exact nature and effect of going virtual. As it pervades the way we live, work, and play at such a fast rate, we rarely have the time to stop and think about the implications of the phenomenon.
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Conference papers on the topic "Orang National Park"

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Erwin, Muhamad, Ahmad Zamheri, Meiyi Darlies, RS Carlos, Dicky Seprianto, Irawan Rusnadi, and Alan Novi Tompunu. "Criminal Law Policy on the Crime of Abuse to the Orang Rimba in the Bukit Duabelas National Park." In 3rd Forum in Research, Science, and Technology (FIRST 2019). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/assehr.k.200407.033.

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