Beyond Essentialism: Women’s Ecological Agency and Traditional Ecological Knowledge in Kampung Adat Dukuh, Garut, West Java, Indonesia

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.21580/sa.v20i2.24058

Keywords:

critical ecofeminism, Kampung Adat Dukuh, Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK), women’s ecological agency

Abstract

The global environmental crisis needs a critical reevaluation of traditional knowledge systems and gender dimensions in ecological management. This study examines the ecological role of women in Kampung Adat Dukuh, Garut, West Java, Indonesia, from a materialist ecofeminist perspective to deconstruct essentialist assumptions regarding women's “natural” closeness to nature. Utilizing qualitative ethnographic methods, this study highlights how women, often marginalized in Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK), act as vital ecological mediators. Their practices, including ritual leadership and subsistence work, demonstrate that ecological agency is socially constructed rather than biologically inherent. This research positions indigenous women as active contributors, enhancing ecofeminist theory and informing gender-sensitive conservation strategies that recognize the socio-political aspects of women's labor.

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2025-10-31

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