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Indonesia

Use the Pulitzer Center Lesson Builder to find and create lesson plans on this country.

 

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    Jihadist radicalization of Indonesian women has emboldened new groups to contribute to acts of terror in Southeast Asia. Image by Dzaqi Akbar/Shutterstock. Indonesia, 2018.
    English
    PART OF: Life After Jihad

    In Indonesia, ‘Women Are Now a Permanent Part of the Jihadi Structure’

    author image
    Ana P. Santos
    2014 Persephone Miel Fellow
    November 1, 2019
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    Muhammad In’am Amin’s brother  was a suicide bomber. Wildan blew himself up  in Iraq in 2007. He was only 19. Amin has always regretted not being able to save him. But after the loss, Amin now hopes to sway others in Indonesia from the path of violent extremism. He’s now teaching former militants to make coffee instead of bombs. Image by Ana P. Santos. Indonesia, 2019.
    English
    PART OF: Life After Jihad

    Bombs to Coffee

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    Ana P. Santos
    2014 Persephone Miel Fellow
    September 4, 2019
    Publication logo
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    A large crowd of local people spend their Sunday afternoon around the fatahillah Square in Jakarta colonial old town named Kota. Image courtesy of AsiaTravel/Shutterstock. Indonesia, 2017.
    English
    PART OF: Life After Jihad

    Indonesian ISIS Orphans Face Uncertain Path to Reintegration

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    Ana P. Santos
    2014 Persephone Miel Fellow
    September 3, 2019
    Publication logo
  • A 10-year old girl holds up her drawing of a home in a government run shelter. The girl is one of the surviving members of the families that carried out a string of ISIS-inspired suicide attacks in the city of Surabaya in May 2018. Image by Jurnasyanto Sukarno. Indonesia, 2018.
    English

    Project

    Life After Jihad

    What happens to the children of suicide bombers and those injured in attacks?

    author image
    Ana P. Santos
    2014 Persephone Miel Fellow
    READ MORE ABOUT THIS PROJECT - Life After Jihad
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    Indira Lakshmanan speaks to Congressman Schiff about U.S. leadership. Denmark, 2019.
    English
    PART OF: Indira Lakshmanan Reports

    Executive Editor Indira Lakshmanan Moderates Panels at 2019 Copenhagen Democracy Summit

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    Multiple Authors
    July 24, 2019
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  • Supraetun at the plantation. Image by Xyza Cruz Bacani. Indonesia, 2018.
    English

    Education Resource

    Meet the Journalist: Xyza Cruz Bacani

    Palm oil is a billion-dollar industry, and Indonesia is one of the major global suppliers. Palm oil...

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    Xyza Cruz Bacani
    Grantee
    READ MORE about Meet the Journalist: Xyza Cruz Bacani
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    Sumatra farmer Abdul Manan makes pasta from the pith of sago palm trees. Unlike oil palm, which can only grown on dry land, the indigenous sago is water-tolerant. Indonesia wants farmers to plant more swamp trees, avoiding the need to drain its coastal wetlands. Image by Daniel Grossman. Indonesia, 2019.
    English
    PART OF: Notes from the Underground: How Degraded Peatlands Could Accelerate Global Warming

    Restoring Indonesia's Peatlands—One Pasta at a Time

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    Daniel Grossman
    Southeast Asia RJF Advisory Committee Member
    March 21, 2019
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    Abdul Manan makes sago noodles with a small pasta maker and packs them for retail sale in plastic bags. He sells about one ton of pasta each month. Image by Daniel Grossman. Indonesia, 2019.
    English
    PART OF: Notes from the Underground: How Degraded Peatlands Could Accelerate Global Warming

    Restoring Indonesia’s Peatlands to Their Natural Soggy Glory

    author image
    Daniel Grossman
    Southeast Asia RJF Advisory Committee Member
    March 21, 2019
    Publication logo
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    SAPLINGS. Palm oil plantations occupy about 1.9 million hectares of land in Riau. Image by Xyza Cruz Bacani. Indonesia, 2018.
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    PART OF: Climate Change and Human Trafficking in Indonesia

    IN PHOTOS: No Man's Land

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    Xyza Cruz Bacani
    Grantee
    February 18, 2019
    Publication logo
  • Early morning view of a primary growth forest in East Kalimantan, Borneo. Image by Kent Wagner. Indonesia, 2016.
    English

    Pulitzer Center Update

    AU Student Fellow Alum Nominated for College Television Award

    Student Fellow Kent Wagner's film is being nominated for the Television Academy Foundation's 39th...

    author #1 image author #2 image
    Multiple Authors
    February 13, 2019
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    Farmer Norhadi points to forest cleared to make room for the Mega Rice Project
    English
    PART OF: Notes from the Underground: How Degraded Peatlands Could Accelerate Global Warming

    Fire and Rain: 'Living Downstream' Reports from Borneo

    author image
    Daniel Grossman
    Southeast Asia RJF Advisory Committee Member
    February 10, 2019
    Publication logo
  • Smog and smoke over Borneo and Indonesia, 1997. Image courtesy of NASA.
    English

    Project

    Notes from the Underground: How Degraded Peatlands Could Accelerate Global Warming

    Indonesia is repairing a vast peatland damaged in an ill-fated agricultural project. Peat breakdown...

    author image
    Daniel Grossman
    Southeast Asia RJF Advisory Committee Member
    READ MORE ABOUT THIS PROJECT - Notes from the Underground: How Degraded Peatlands Could Accelerate Global Warming

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