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Titre Inside Indonesia
Langue anglais
Pays, continent Indonésie, Asie
Editeur Edward Aspinall, Indonésie
Périodicité trimestrielle
Editions électronique
Site web http://www.insideindonesia.org/

actualites

Confronting oil palm plantations

Greg Acciaioli 02/01/12

A community in Central Kalimantan, unable to claim indigenous status, finds it difficult to defend its resources against global capital The landscape of Borneo – offshore oil-rich Brunei excepted – is becoming increasingly a patchwork of (...)

Prosperity denied

Nicola Colbran 16/09/10

East Nusa Tenggara, Indonesia’s south easternmost province, is famous for its unique flora and fauna and has one of the most diverse marine environments in the world. Yet this natural beauty has brought little wealth to the peoples of the (...)

Resistance through memory

Bosman Batubara 20/07/10

The victims of the Lapindo mudflow disaster continue to assert their rights to compensation.

Organising for migrant worker rights

Michele Ford, Wahyu Susilo 19/05/10

Non-governmental organisations continue to fill the gap in the absence of viable alternatives Indonesia’s migrant workers experience labour rights abuses in Southeast Asia and the Middle East that would simply not be tolerated by trade unions in (...)

Fighting over the land and forest

Sandra Moniaga 18/11/09

Citorek Kasepuhan is a adat (customary) community in Lebak district, Banten, some 200 kilometres from Jakarta. Community members consider the 7400 hectares of land they live on to be theirs, adat land by right. But the Ministry of Forestry (...)

Freedom of expression

Jennifer Robinson 31/10/08

Yohana Pekei and Nelly Pigome sell handicrafts by the road in Jayapura. In January 2008 they were interrogated by Indonesian police and intelligence agents because of the bags they make and sell. What could possibly be so dangerous about a bag (...)

Workers in politics

Olle Törnquist 23/04/08

Why is organised labour missing from the democracy movement ? When business abandoned Suharto in 1997-98, and students and sections of the elite did away with him, labour was nowhere to be seen. Some workers took to the streets when Suharto was (...)

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