Livelihoods

In search of sustainable farming
Bali-based NGOs are an important part of Indonesia’s growing sustainable agriculture movement
Who owns the carbon?
Indonesia’s carbon stores spark international attention
Resistance through memory
The victims of the Lapindo mudflow disaster continue to assert their rights to compensation
The triumph of jamu
European interest in Indonesian traditional healing has had its ups and downs, but in Java jamu reigns supreme, as it has for a long, long time
Prosperity denied
Mining is booming in East Nusa Tenggara, but where is the wealth going?
Religious Bandung
Bandung’s government opts for a religious program that matches the city’s character
Eager to work
The value of children’s paid work on Lombok’s tobacco plantations presents a challenge to emotive arguments for the wholesale banning of child labour
Tangguh goes onstream
BP’s massive LNG project is due to begin operations in late 2008, despite social and environmental costs
Buffalo-induced malaria
An Indonesian medical doctor reflects on rural health practices
Crime and criminality
This edition of Inside Indonesia explores the complex politics of illegality
Policy drift
Ten years after Suharto, the economy is not recovering fast enough
A world of reading
Local writers help combat illiteracy in rural Banten
Bali'€™s wild side
Managing conservation, tourism and the needs of local communities in Bali Barat National Park
Sand rafts - a photo essay
Along the Opak River in Pundong, near Bantul, Yogyakarta, locals trade their sweat for a pile of sand.
Disabled megalopolitan
Jakarta’s disabled are striving for a better deal.
Singapore, not sawit
Tourism campaigns in East Kalimantan fall short of provincial middle class aspirations

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