Low awareness of the link between heat and eco-anxiety in Indonesia requires a more comprehensive strategy in the campaign.
While virality holds values, state actors still hold responsibility for sensing and understanding the inherent problems, and recognising the urgency to address it through differing policy capacities.
Addressing data breaches and government surveillance misuse requires a balanced approach that respects national security and individual privacy.
Data showed the view of the Indonesian government wasn’t prominent in news coverage of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
Liars and fake news merchants are profiting from misinformation and disinformation in Indonesia. Can it be fixed?
As Indonesia’s election looms, young people want action on climate change, but research shows the country’s political class isn’t listening.
There’s plenty of evidence showing how social media use can affect youth mental health, but studies often omit the developing countries of the global south.
The growing gulf between policy spaces and research communities in Indonesia has been apparent in recent years, as evidenced in the use of a “one-size-fits-all” approach to the enactment of new laws and regulation.
Young people are getting a dose of social media-driven eco-anxiety, but there are ways we can help them beat it.
It appears to have become more prevalent, visible, and possibly also more politicised in post-pandemic times, as general trust in governments and mainstream media declines.
A unified approach from journalism scholars in the Global North and Global South is needed to promote more gender-sensitive, solutions-driven, and victim-survivor-centred reporting about violence against women.
The platform’s handling of harmful content, including disinformation, hate speech and propaganda, has attracted widespread criticism.
Is Indonesia's proposed new capital in Borneo a model for sustainable urban transformation in Southeast Asia, or an impending environmental disaster?
A controversial exhibition in Amsterdam could represent another step towards enhancing friendship between two former foes, but highlights how the violence of the past can neither be completely erased from public memory.
Indonesia’s government has funded a thorough media literacy program, but rather than stopping misinformation, it may serve to undermine independent thought.
Residents of flood-prone areas have been counting on local knowledge and community support to deal with floods for centuries. Can scientists work with them to mitigate the problem?
Despite Western perceptions of these flying mammals, in the East they’re associated with folklore and customs that are largely positive in nature.
While the pandemic has been a blow to women’s rights, new forms of engagement are opening avenues for women to make their voices heard.
The federal government’s changes to university funding, making some arts and humanities courses more than twice as expensive, is misguided.
Agencies working to protect vulnerable women and children, often in fragile and conflict-affected countries, are coming under increasing pressure in delivering their services during the COVID-19 global crisis.
The COVID-19 crisis further reinforces the urgent need to repatriate children of foreign fighters from conflict-ridden regions.
In developing and conflict-affected countries, support systems for children’s protection in times of the pandemic risk being overlooked.
E-commerce represents less than two per cent of commerce in Southeast Asia. For venture capitalist, Jefrey Joe, that gap represents opportunity.
The corporate high-performance, merchandise-heavy, social media-driven vision of surfing isn't one shared by many wave riders.
Dummy text