Rukun warga

Local administrative division in Indonesia
This article is part of a series on
Subdivisions of Indonesia
Level 1
  • Provinces (provinsi or daerah istimewa)
(GDP; GRP per capita; HDI; poverty rate)
Level 2
(full list; cities by GDP; regencies by GDP; cities by population; regencies by population)
Level 3
  • Districts
(kecamatan, distrik, kapanewon, or kemantren)
Level 4
  • Rural or urban villages
(desa or kelurahan)
Others
  • Rukun warga
  • Rukun tetangga
  • v
  • t
  • e
A welcome gate to a rukun warga in Cirebon, West Java

A rukun warga (abbreviated RW, literally "pillar of residents") is an administrative division of Indonesia under the village or kelurahan (or under: dusun or village). Rukun warga not including the division of administration[clarification needed], and the formation of local communities is through consultation in the framework of community service set by the village or villages. An RW is further divided into rukun tetangga (RT). Most information about governance and functioning of the RW and RT is in Indonesian.[1][2] Some non-Indonesian anthropologists have written about the functions and issues of the RW.[3][4][5][6]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ 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
  2. ^ 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
  3. ^ Mearns, David (1999-04-01), "Urban Kampongs in Ambon: whose domain? Whose desa?(Indonesia)", The Australian Journal of Anthropology, 10 (1), Australian Anthropological Society: 15(1), doi:10.1111/j.1835-9310.1999.tb00010.x, ISSN 1035-8811
  4. ^ Guinness, Patrick (2015-12-08), Kampung, Islam and State in Urban Java, NUS Press - National University of Singapore, retrieved 15 July 2016
  5. ^ Guinness, Patrick; Asian Studies Association of Australia (1986), Harmony and hierarchy in a Javanese kampung, Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-582666-1
  6. ^ Guinness, Patrick (1981), Rukun Kampung : social relations in urban Yogyakarta, retrieved 15 July 2016
  • v
  • t
  • e
Designations for types of administrative division
Common English terms
Area
Borough
Canton
Capital
City
Community
County
Country
Department
District
Division
Indian reserve/reservation
Municipality
Prefecture
Province
Region
State
Territory
Town
Township
Unit
Zone
Other English terms
Current
Historical
Non-English terms or loanwords
Current
Historical
Used by ten or more countries or having derived terms. Historical derivations in italics.
See also
Census division
Electoral district
List of administrative divisions by country
Slavic administrative divisions
Stub icon

This Indonesia-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

  • v
  • t
  • e