Indigenous Knowledge Systems and Sustainable Tourism Development: Lessons from the Baduy and Toraja Communities
Keywords:
Indigenous Knowledge Systems, Baduy, Toraja, Pikukuh, Aluk Todolo, sustainable tourism, cultural sovereignty, IndonesiaAbstract
Indigenous Knowledge Systems (IKS) are increasingly invoked in sustainable tourism scholarship, yet the operational frameworks through which they shape, restrict, and re-direct visitor activity remain under-theorized. This study examines two Indonesian Indigenous communities with internationally recognized but institutionally distinct IKS: the Baduy of Banten, whose Pikukuh (customary law) imposes among the most stringent visitor restrictions of any Asian Indigenous community, and the Toraja of South Sulawesi, whose Aluk Todolo and Tongkonan system organize an extensive ritual-cultural tourism economy. The research aim is to identify how IKS architectures produce distinct visitor-management logics and what these logics offer to broader sustainable tourism theory and practice. A comparative ethnographic study was conducted between January and February 2026, comprising 28 semi-structured interviews with customary leaders, community members, tourism operators, and government officials across both regions, alongside participant observation at 11 ritual and tourism events and analysis of 24 customary, regulatory, and operational documents. Thematic analysis was conducted using a hybrid deductive–inductive coding strategy in NVivo 14. Findings reveal that IKS function as substantive governance instruments rather than cultural backdrop: visitor caps, sacred-zone restrictions, ritual-calendar precedence, and selective knowledge disclosure all derive from IKS internal logic and operate independently of statutory tourism regulation. The study introduces the Living Knowledge Tourism Framework (LKTF), which re-positions IKS as the structural anchor of sustainable visitor management rather than an interpretive overlay. Implications are offered for policymakers, destination managers, and Indigenous communities navigating tourism pressure on ancestral territories.
Keywords: Indigenous Knowledge Systems; Baduy; Toraja; Pikukuh; Aluk Todolo; sustainable tourism; cultural sovereignty; Indonesia
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