 My name is Christian Lund and I am a professor in Development Studies at the University of Copenhagen. I am really delighted to participate in the iOS Fair Transition Land Academy and I'm going to say a few things about my talk in a few days. I've entitled it An Air of Legality because I think there is a whole set of paradoxes that we are so used to that we sometimes don't even notice them anymore. My work has been on Indonesia and in Indonesia for many people rights is a faint promise and justice is just a rumor. All the same people seem to resort to justice and to the law when they want to claim land. One can say in a compressed way that ordinary people usually face three types of lawlessness. First of all, law favors government over its citizens. Second, law is always so complex that you need basically a law degree to figure out what is right and what is wrong. Law is often contradictory and can be used for many different outcomes. But finally, what is maybe most important is that there is a presumption that government acts with legality. So even if government enacts illegal policies, they're seen as legal just because it is government because we have this presumption of legality. This puts ordinary people in a very difficult situation and it's a bit of a conundrum why they still want to play on the terrain of legality when they are claiming land. And my talk is going to be about what are the different strategies people are using to make their claims look legal? What are the ways in which they act to look as not rebels, but citizens, not thieves, but owners, not trespassers, but citizens in a particular community? And that is what my talk is going to be about. Thank you very much.