Abstract:
This study intends to explain the reality of the resistance movement committed Kasikan village
communities on the presence of state plantation firms which take forcible land claimed as their
ancestral territories. The method used in this research is descriptive qualitative method by tracing the
primary data, interviewing informants assessed know the events on the field, and the data was analyzed
qualitatively. This study found that the resistance movement by villagers Kasikan not directed directly
to the state company that took their land, but addressed to the workers who brought the company from
outside the village of different religions, races and cultures by isolating the use of the political rights of
residents of the company's workers at the election of Village Head of Kasikan in 2011. Conducted
massive resistance movement oversee every stage of the selection of self-defense mechanism villagers
Kasikan of the perceived destructive effects of identity on the presence of plantation companies to
capitalize on political opportunities that are open, mobilization structures and framing processes.