Indigenous Land Rights and the Marginalization of the Orang Asli in Malaysia
Resource information
Date of publication
December 2018
Resource Language
Pages
10
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This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Perspectives on Business and Economics at Lehigh Preserve. It has been accepted for inclusion in Volume 37 - The New Malaysia (2019) by an authorized administrator of Lehigh Preserve. For more information, please contact preserve@lehigh.edu.
Although the Orang Asli are the original, indigenous peoples of Peninsular Malaysia, they have been largely excluded from the country’s economic growth of recent decades. Rather than protect this marginalized community, state officials and private agencies regularly exploit the Orang Asli and their ancestral lands. Given that many of the Orang Asli’s prevailing challenges stem from their lack of customary land ownership, systemic change must come from the legislative level.