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Sociology - General & Miscellaneous, Australian & Oceanic Studies - Indonesia, Asian Studies - Southeast Asia - Indonesia
Perfect Order: Recognizing Complexity in Bali by J. Stephen Lansing — book cover

Perfect Order: Recognizing Complexity in Bali

by J. Stephen Lansing
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Overview

Along rivers in Bali, small groups of farmers meet regularly in water temples to manage their irrigation systems. They have done so for a thousand years. Over the centuries, water temple networks have expanded to manage the ecology of rice terraces at the scale of whole watersheds. Although each group focuses on its own problems, a global solution nonetheless emerges that optimizes irrigation flows for everyone. Did someone have to design Bali's water temple networks, or could they have emerged from a self-organizing process?

Perfect Order—a groundbreaking work at the nexus of conservation, complexity theory, and anthropology—describes a series of fieldwork projects triggered by this question, ranging from the archaeology of the water temples to their ecological functions and their place in Balinese cosmology. Stephen Lansing shows that the temple networks are fragile, vulnerable to the cross-currents produced by competition among male descent groups. But the feminine rites of water temples mirror the farmers' awareness that when they act in unison, small miracles of order occur regularly, as the jewel-like perfection of the rice terraces produces general prosperity. Much of this is barely visible from within the horizons of Western social theory.

The fruit of a decade of multidisciplinary research, this absorbing book shows that even as researchers probe the foundations of cooperation in the water temple networks, the very existence of the traditional farming techniques they represent is threatened by large-scale development projects.

About the Author, J. Stephen Lansing

J. Stephen Lansing is professor of anthropology at the University of Arizona, external professor at the Santa Fe Institute, and senior research fellow at the Stockholm Resilience Centre. He is the author of "Priests and Programmers" and "The Balinese", and writer and codirector of documentary films such as "Three Worlds of Bali" and "The Goddess and the Computer".

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Editorials

American Anthropologist

[A] winning combination of hard science and interpretative ethnography.
— Roy Ellen

American Anthropologist - Roy Ellen

[A] winning combination of hard science and interpretative ethnography.

Cybernetics & Human Knowing

I would recommend . . . this book . . . as perhaps providing an example of social and ecological self-organization which might be useful in modeling other systems, whether in the social or ecological field or even in other fields in which complex adaptive systems may be studied.

Cybernetics & Human Knowing

I would recommend . . . this book . . . as perhaps providing an example of social and ecological self-organization which might be useful in modeling other systems, whether in the social or ecological field or even in other fields in which complex adaptive systems may be studied.
— Phillip Guddemi

American Anthropologist

[A] winning combination of hard science and interpretative ethnography.
— Roy Ellen

Cybernetics & Human Knowing

I would recommend . . . this book . . . as perhaps providing an example of social and ecological self-organization which might be useful in modeling other systems, whether in the social or ecological field or even in other fields in which complex adaptive systems may be studied.
— Phillip Guddemi

Book Details

Published
September 16, 2012
Publisher
Princeton University Press
Pages
248
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780691156262

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