Rukun tetangga

A rukun tetangga (abbrievated RT, literally "pillar of neighbours") is an administrative division of a village in Indonesia, under a rukun warga. The RT is the lowest administrative division of Indonesia.

The rukun tetangga operates through consultation in the framework of community service,[1] set by the village or villages.[2]

The local level of governance of rukun warga and rukun tetangga also includes the rukun kampung [3]

A rukun tetangga is chaired by a ketua RT elected by its citizens. An RT consists of a number of households (KK).

Most information about governance and functioning of the RT and RW is in Indonesian.[4][5] Some non-Indonesian anthropologists have written about the functions and issues.[6][7][8][9]

See also

Notes

  1. "Self-help street by street". The Canberra Times. Vol. 41, no. 11, 769. Australian Capital Territory, Australia. 17 August 1967. p. 19. Retrieved 15 July 2016 via National Library of Australia.
  2. Jakarta Raya (Indonesia). Rukun Tetangga; Jakarta Raya (Indonesia). Rukun Kampung; Yayasan Res Publica (Jakarta, Indonesia) (1974), Pelaksaan peraturan pembentukan RI-RK di Daswati I Djakarta Raya, Inter Documentation Company, retrieved 15 July 2016
  3. Suwarno, P. J; Universitas Sanata Dharma (1995), Dari azazyookai dan tonarigumi ke rukun kampung dan rukun tetangga di Yogyakarta (1942-1989) : sebuah tinjauan historis (Cet. 1 ed.), Universitas Sanata Dharma, ISBN 978-979-8927-09-6
  4. Jakarta Raya (Indonesia). Biro Administrasi Wilayah (2005), Buku petunjuk pelaksanaan rukun tetangga dan rukun warga (RT-RW), dewan kelurahan dan dewan kota/kabupaten Provinsi DKI Jakarta, Biro Administrasi Wilayah, Provinsi DKI Jakarta, retrieved 15 July 2016
  5. Jakarta Raya (Indonesia). Direktorat I/Pemerintahan; Jakarta Raya (Indonesia). Kantor Urusan Penduduk (1971), Himpunan peraturan kependudukan : pedoman bagi para lurah, rukun tetangga (RT), rukun warga (RW) dan petugas2 lainnja, tentang kependudukan Daerah Chusus Ibukota Djakarta, s.n, retrieved 15 July 2016
  6. Mearns, David (1999-04-01), "Urban Kampongs in Ambon: whose domain? Whose desa?(Indonesia)", The Australian Journal of Anthropology, Australian Anthropological Society, 10 (1): 15(1), doi:10.1111/j.1835-9310.1999.tb00010.x, ISSN 1035-8811
  7. Guinness, Patrick (2015-12-08), Kampung, Islam and State in Urban Java, NUS Press - National University of Singapore, retrieved 15 July 2016
  8. Guinness, Patrick; Asian Studies Association of Australia (1986), Harmony and hierarchy in a Javanese kampung, Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-582666-1
  9. Guinness, Patrick (1981), Rukun Kampung : social relations in urban Yogyakarta, retrieved 15 July 2016
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