Human Rights

Criminalising justice
The ‘communist stigma’ is being used as a tool in the courtroom to attack human and environmental rights
Reformasi’s broken promises
Sexual minorities increasingly feel left out of Indonesia’s democratisation processes
Bandung, city of human rights?
Despite stated goodwill by authorities, intolerance towards minority groups is growing in Bandung
A complex relationship
1965 collaborators and victims living side by side silently negotiate between past and present
Mapping the 1965-66 killings in East Java
In the first of a series of articles we present recent work by demographers and genocide scholars at Michigan State University's Asian Studies Centre on the 1965-1966 killings. Their analysis takes the form of a collection of infographics tracing population numbers across East Java at this time.
Untreated trauma in Nduga
The plight of Papua’s internally displaced persons is not being recognised by the Indonesian government
Timotius and Freeport
Elite politics and Freeport Indonesia’s non-compliance continue to deny Timotius Kambu his owed wages
No justice at home or abroad
Indonesia’s children wrongly imprisoned in Australia still haven’t been compensated
The red thread
A recently uncovered report reveals how anti-communist paranoia stoked abductions of pro-democracy activists in the last days of the New Order
An elderly woman stands in a grass field in a rural dwelling, looking to the side.
The 2009 mining law and the community benefit in Sulawesi
Facing history
A witness account of the 2015 International People’s Tribunal on 1965