Critics say the sweeping measure near passage in Parliament would lead to greater deforestation and the loss of worker protections.
Skills Futures
Balinese man Gede Darma has been forced to return to seaweed farming after foreign tourists were barred from entering the country. [Video]
Indonesian biometrics developer Akurat Satu recognised for facial recognition in wild images, by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) in the US.
Institut Teknologi Sepuluh Nopember in Surabaya has signed up to provide five years of development support for Tulungagung regency in remote southern East Java.
Humans will follow many other species to extinction if scientists do not find the funding and the platform they need to change the path we are on, warns Nobel Laureate Professor Peter Doherty.
The failure of family companies to create sustainable competitive advantage is due to a reluctance to invest in new business ideas and a tendency to avoid risk.
An AIC research program looks into the challenges that face rural young people in South Sulawesi forced to return home due to COVID-19.
Aquaculture provides fallback for people of the Penida Archipelago as they wait for tourists’ return.
Indonesian women carry the burden of unpaid work, including care-giving, due to persistent gender inequality in Indonesian society and segregation in the labour market.
The ‘Smart Village’, run by ITS students and faculty members, provides access to books, both paper and digital, along with free internet access, internet skills training, and more.
The Australia-Indonesia Centre and OpenLearning have formed a partnership to deliver programs into Indonesia that will improve research and collaborative skills.
IPB University’s Center for Coastal and Ocean Resources Studies (CCORS) has developed a range of food and drink products containing the micro marine algae spirulina.
For the last two months, two young friends have been collecting plastic trash in their Jakarta neighbourhood in exchange for wifi access.
Support is needed to strengthen Indonesia’s fast rising digital economy with greater inclusivity and cybersecurity.
If women are less likely to comment academic works, they could be excluded from or marginalized in important scholarly debates and networks.
Indonesian female entrepreneurs tend to work in slower productivity fields and also have less access to skills development training, technology, and business networks.