Marginalised Groups

What gives rise to moral outrage?
Rather than being merely the result of religious extremism, recent cases of moral outrage point to a wide range of current political and social problems
Teaching remote Indonesia
A new program sends Indonesia’s best and brightest graduates to teach children in its poorest villages
Living without a state
People in rural Papua are more interested in basic services than grand political struggles
High stakes
ASRIANA KEBON speaks to Indonesian underage minors who were returned to Indonesia following age determination hearings in Darwin
Dealing with social exclusion
Illegal squatters in Jakarta struggle for recognition of their homes and livelihoods
Art for the people
Taring Padi takes stock of a more than a decade fighting the political establishment – with art as its weapon
Public works and ethnic conflict
Tarakan’s riots illustrate the risks of collusive public contracting and the continued weakness of local security responses
Community engagement
Don’t ignore REDD’s impacts on communities!
Theatre of life
A new generation of Indonesian theatre activists is staging performances based on the everyday experiences of local communities
A disaster, but not genocide
Migration has caused many problems in Papua, but it is not part of a genocidal master plan
A man on a mission
From the highlands of Papua to exile in England, Benny Wenda is a leader of his people
Ahmadiyah dispute intensifies
Violence at the National Monument in Jakarta almost caused a conflict between Nahdlatul Ulama and Muhammadiyah in Lamongan
No positive news
People living with HIV face corruption and incompetence in the health system
Staying clean
Drug rehabilitation in Indonesia