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As the president centralizes foreign policy in his own hands, guided by instinct and private diplomacy, a generation of young Indonesians are determined to break it open.
Ours is an age of instant outrage and fleeting wisdom, where humanity searches for quick fixes to problems generations in the making.
The demise of MTV and the new disruption of on-demand platforms reflects a major shift in the global cultural landscape.
A team from the Bandung Institute of Technology (ITB) and Telkom University has received a UNESCO Youth Hackathon award for their media literacy gamification concept that was designed to help combat misinformation.
Today’s youth are numerous but politically complacent; celebrated as a demographic bonus yet treated as disposable; expressive in voice but struggling to author a narrative of their own.
What could pass to history as the “Anwar Doctrine” could be a reminder that the Asia Pacific is a true engine of multipolarism, not a disruptor of it.
Young people across the world, who appear to be inspired by the Gen Z movements in Indonesia and Nepal, have continued demonstrations against their governments in recent weeks.
Youth unemployment has remained stubbornly high despite the oft touted demographic bonus, but the government needs to step up targeted solutions or risk losing an entire generation.
According to research from the World Bank, one out of seven young Indonesians may find themselves out of work.
Major General Ruphin Fortunat Dimbisoa Zafisambo is named head of government late Monday in a bid to quell anti-government unrest that has claimed 22 lives.