Residents of Sinaulu Jaya and Mosolo in Southeast Sulawesi stand guard to prevent land intrusion by a nickel mining company. (Project M/Yuli Z.)
Climate Change is well-recognised as a massive challenge facing society today. It is clear that the political, economic and social consequences of climate change will not be felt equally, not only globally but also across Indonesia. Geography, class and—indeed–gender dynamics will influence how individual Indonesians experience and respond to climate change.
But it’s not just the environmental impacts that require navigation. As Arora-Johnson wrote in 2011, within the gender and climate development nexus, poor, rural-based women are portrayed as the most vulnerable and likely to die due to climate events. So, are these portrayals accurate? And how have they influenced thinking about women’s roles in climate crisis projects. Sustainable development projects that seek to address climate change are often coupled with questions of how to address inequality, with a narrow focus on what gender inequality actually is and who is responsible for overcoming it.
In this episode, Dr Elisabeth Kramer speaks with Dr Jane Ahlstrand, a senior lecturer in Indonesian studies at the University of New England, about her new research project on the relationship between climate crisis projects, sustainable development and gender in Indonesia. Jane completed her PhD at the University of Queensland, where she examined the use of language in the Indonesian online news media to represent women politicians and their dynamic relationship with power during a period of political and social transition. She is the author of the book, Women, Media, and Power in Indonesia published by Routledge in 2022.
In 2025, the Talking Indonesia podcast is co-hosted by Dr Elisabeth Kramer from the University of New South Wales, Tito Ambyo from RMIT, Dr Jemma Purdey from the Australia-Indonesia Centre, and Dr Jacqui Baker from Murdoch University.