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  2. Law of Indonesia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Law_of_Indonesia

    Law of Indonesia is based on a civil law system, intermixed with local customary law and Dutch law.Before European presence and colonization began in the sixteenth century, indigenous kingdoms ruled the archipelago independently with their own custom laws, known as adat (unwritten, traditional rules still observed in the Indonesian society). [1]

  3. Dutch East Indies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dutch_East_Indies

    The Dutch East Indies, [3] also known as the Netherlands East Indies (Dutch: Nederlands(ch)-Indië; Indonesian: Hindia Belanda), was a Dutch colony with territory mostly comprising the modern state of Indonesia, which declared independence on 17 August 1945.

  4. Civil Code of Indonesia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Civil_Code_of_Indonesia

    The Civil Code of Indonesia (Dutch: Burgerlijk Wetboek van Indonesië, BW), commonly known in Indonesian as Kitab Undang-Undang Hukum Perdata (lit. ' Law Book of Civil Code ' , derived from Dutch), abbreviated as KUH Perdata ), are laws and regulations that form the basis of civil law in Indonesia.

  5. Company rule in the Dutch East Indies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Company_rule_in_the_Dutch...

    View of the Island and the City of Batavia Belonging to the Dutch, for the India Company. In 1603, the first permanent Dutch trading post in Indonesia was established in Banten, northwest Java, [7] and in 1611, another was established at Jayakarta (later renamed 'Batavia' and then 'Jakarta').

  6. Indonesian Criminal Code - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indonesian_Criminal_Code

    The Criminal Code, also known in Indonesian as KUHP or in Dutch as Wetboek van Strafrecht, are laws and regulations that regulate criminal acts in Indonesia.The Criminal Code that is currently in force is the Criminal Code which originates from Dutch colonial law, namely Wetboek van Strafrecht voor Nederlands-Indië.

  7. Slavery in Indonesia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slavery_in_Indonesia

    On 1 January 1860, the Dutch banned slavery in the Dutch East Indies. [23] The Dutch slavery abolition could only be enforced in the parts of Indonesia which were under Dutch control and thus subject to Dutch law, which meant that slavery was only abolished in about a quarter of Indonesia, such as Java. [24]

  8. Administrative divisions of the Dutch East Indies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Administrative_divisions...

    The Dutch East Indies was a Dutch colony consisting of what is now mostly the modern state of Indonesia.The Anglo-Dutch Treaty of 1824, which ceded Dutch Malacca, a governorate of the Dutch East Indies that was transferred to Great Britain has consolidated modern-day rule to the Malacca state of Malaysia.

  9. Judiciary of Indonesia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Judiciary_of_Indonesia

    Indonesian law is a continuation and improvement of the Dutch colonial laws, Islamic family laws, and aspects of Adat laws (unwritten, traditional rules still observed in the Indonesian society). The highest law of the land is the 1945 Constitution, amended four times from 1999 to 2002 during the early Reformasi period. Under the current rules ...