Walking the Invisible Lines: Ethnographic Reflections on Statelessness Among Indigenous Communities in Rural Sarawak
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.33736/jbk.9593.2025Keywords:
: statelessness, fieldwork, reflection, Sarawak, Malaysia, indigenous peopleAbstract
This article reflects on the ethnographic journey undertaken to explore the lived realities of statelessness among rural indigenous communities in Sarawak, Malaysia. The objective of the study is to examine how legal invisibility intersects with historical marginalization, administrative barriers, and everyday precarity to shape the experiences of indigenous individuals who remain excluded from formal citizenship. Utilizing a qualitative ethnographic methodology, the research draws upon in-depth interviews, participant observations, and case studies conducted between 2021 and 2023 across selected stateless individuals and stakeholders in Kota Samarahan, Lundu, Sibu, and Kuching. The findings reveal that statelessness is not merely a legal anomaly but a structurally produced and socially lived condition, perpetuated through unrecognized customary marriages, intergenerational documentation gaps, religious conversion complexities, and rigid bureaucratic systems. Everyday life for stateless individuals is characterized by restricted access to education, healthcare, and employment, compounded by emotional distress and societal invisibility. This reflection highlights the methodological challenges and ethical considerations encountered during fieldwork, particularly in negotiating trust and representing vulnerable communities with dignity. The article concludes that addressing statelessness among Sarawak’s indigenous peoples demands a critical rethinking of citizenship frameworks, emphasizing historical justice, cultural sensitivity, and the amplification of indigenous voices in policymaking processes.
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