Indonesia mengelola jaringan madrasah (sekolah berbasis agama Islam) yang terbesar di dunia. Sekolah-sekolah ini telah berperan besar dalam memberikan akses pendidikan bagi anak perempuan, dan bisa jadi model yang baik bagi pemerintah Taliban.
(ANTARA FOTO/Sahrul Manda Tikupadang)
Indonesia bisa jadi model yang baik bagi pemerintah Taliban terkait bagaimana suatu negara mayoritas Muslim maupun organisasi keagamaan dapat memperluas akses pendidikan bagi anak perempuan.
Indonesia runs the world’s largest network of madrasas (Islamic schools). They have contributed significantly to girls’ enrolment, and can serve as a model for the Taliban government.
(ANTARA FOTO/Sahrul Manda Tikupadang)
Indonesia can serve as an important model for the Taliban of how Muslim nations and faith-based organisations can play a big role in expanding girls’ education.
Seorang demonstran memberikan hormat tiga jari selama protes terhadap kudeta militer di Mandalay, Myanmar, pada awal Mei.
EPA
Political top-down governance and the rising challenges to civil society during the pandemic emphasise the region’s disregard of human rights and people’s ability to self-organise.
Will South Asia be able to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals by 2030?
Sanjeev Gupta/EPA
After the pandemic, South Asian governments must spend money on making public services work, rather than relying on GDP growth to pull people out of poverty.
A child in a poor and isolated village in Rote Island, East Nusa Tenggara.
(Shtterstock/Reezky Pradata)
Fisca Miswari Aulia, National Development Planning Agency (BAPPENAS); Maliki, National Development Planning Agency (BAPPENAS), and M Niaz Asadullah, University of Malaya
Bappenas conducted a simulation to predict how COVID-19 will impact poverty in Indonesia. Without intervention, the pandemic will drag at least 3.6 million Indonesians into poverty by the end of 2020.
Young children pass the time in their riverside shanty town on the banks of the heavily-polluted Ciliwung River.
(Dewi Putra/Shutterstock)
M Niaz Asadullah, University of Malaya; Fisca Miswari Aulia, National Development Planning Agency (BAPPENAS), and Maliki, National Development Planning Agency (BAPPENAS)
COVID19 threatens to reverse years of Indonesia’s positive trends in poverty alleviation. We highlight lessons from past policies to prevent another poverty hike during the pandemic.
Potret seorang anak di suatu desa yang miskin dan terisolasi di Pulau Rote, Nusa Tenggara Timur.
(Shtterstock/Reezky Pradata)
Fisca Miswari Aulia, National Development Planning Agency (BAPPENAS); Maliki, National Development Planning Agency (BAPPENAS), and M Niaz Asadullah, University of Malaya
BAPPENAS melakukan simulasi untuk memproyeksikan dampak COVID19 terhadap kemiskinan di Indonesia. Tanpa intervensi, pandemi ini akan membuat setidaknya 3.6 juta penduduk jatuh miskin.
Sekumpulan anak bermain di sisi Sungai Ciliwung yang penuh pencemaran.
(Dewi Putra/Shutterstock)
M Niaz Asadullah, University of Malaya; Fisca Miswari Aulia, National Development Planning Agency (BAPPENAS), and Maliki, National Development Planning Agency (BAPPENAS)
COVID19 dapat membalikkan tren positif puluhan tahun penuntasan kemiskinan di Indonesia. Terdapat beberapa pelajaran dari kebijakan terdahulu untuk meredam kenaikan angka kemiskinan selama pandemi.
Angka partisipasi sekolah antara anak laki-laki perempuan di Indonesia setara, tapi masih ada bias gender dalam buku pelajaran.
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Indonesian textbooks represent gender equality better than their South Asian counterparts, but our analysis shows portrayals of women are still biased.
Dua orang siswi sedang belajar di sebuah madrasah di Jakarta Selatan.
AAP Image/Eka Nickmatulhuda
Riset menemukan bahwa rumah tangga miskin lebih memprioritaskan pendidikan mahal untuk anak laki-laki, sementara anak perempuan dikirmkan ke madrasah yang murah. Kenapa?
Students study at a madrasa (Islamic school) in South Jakarta.
Eka Nickmatulhuda/AAP
Research finds that poor households in rural Indonesia tend to prioritise high-cost schooling options for sons, while sending daughters to under-resourced Islamic schools. Why is this the case?
Moratorium hutan, transparansi data kehutanan dan perkebunan, serta tata kelola hutan berbasis masyarakat menjadi isu utama dalam termin kedua pemerintahan Jokowi. (Donny Sophandi/shutterstock)
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Pemerintah Indonesia seharusnya bisa lebih transparan dan membuka akses publik terkait data perubahan lahan, membuat permanen moratorium hutan, hingga menerapkan pengelolaan hutan berbasis komunitas.
Entering the second term of his presidency, Jokowi administration needs to put forest and land fires as priority.
Donny Sophandi/www.shutterstock.com
The Indonesian government should improve transparency and public access to land-use data, make the ban on new plantations on primary forests permanent, and give communities access to forests.
Bangladesh is a global poster child when it comes to improving women’s status in the developing and the Muslim worlds. But a recent amendment to the country’s marriage law threatens its progress.
Participants in the 2015 rally organised by the Coalition for Clean and Fair Elections in Malaysia.
Olivia Harris/Reuters
Participants in the latest organised by the Coalition for Clean and Fair Elections in Malaysia will face a repressive state apparatus as well as an intimidating counter-movement known as Red Shirts.