Power and Stakeholders in IKN Nusantara: Land Use and Environmental Protection Discourse in Indonesia’s New Capital
Abstract
This research examine how the pro-government and counter-discourse on land use and
environmental protection in IKN Nusantara reflect stakeholders’ power, legitimacy, and
urgency. To do this, around 36 selected documents, including policy documents, corporate
press releases, government website articles, NGO reports, and media articles from 2019-2024,
are used to analyze land use and environmental protection in IKN Nusantara. The method used
is a Critical Discourse Analysis; then, the findings are explained using the Theory of
Stakeholder Identification and Salience to explore which stakeholders are prioritized and
excluded based on their power, legitimacy, and urgency. The findings show that these attributes
are shaped by how public discourse represents and recognizes stakeholders. As a pro government discourse, the government and investor maintain their visibility and influence by
framing their roles as appropriate, necessary, and urgent. Meanwhile, marginalized
communities, as a counter-discourse, despite having urgent concerns based on ethical issues
such as land rights and environmental protection, remain excluded because their discourse is
not institutionally recognized, and they lack power. This master thesis concludes that
stakeholder salience in IKN Nusantara is a product of discursive and political dynamics, and
discourse plays a role in including certain stakeholders while excluding others.
Degree
Master theses
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2025-07-02Author
Arief Buwono, Hanindito
Keywords
Capital City Relocation, Critical Discourse Analysis, Stakeholder Salience, Land Use Policy, Environmental Protection
Language
eng