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View all search resultsIndonesia’s citizens, particularly its youth, have shown signs of frustration with the current state of governance, as reflected in various online movements and even last month’s protests against political efforts to circumvent a Constitutional Court ruling.
Mass-membership religious groups have failed to challenge the state's development agenda, which still relies on the extraction of natural resources, fossil fuels and deforestation, thereby accelerating the climate crisis in Indonesia.
Merging the WWF and the PWF into a single entity would encompass the breadth of water governance and set a precedence for a democratic process that respects and incorporates diverse perspectives, especially grassroots movements and underrepresented communities.
Amid what they see as a lack of substantive discussions on relevant issues by political parties ahead of the 2024 general elections, public policy advocate Think Policy and youth-based media What Is Up, Indonesia (WIUI) have launched the Bijak Memilih movement, which aims to educate youth on public policies and issue-based politics.
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