KITLV/Royal Netherlands Institute of Southeast Asian and Caribbean Studies

Latest news

Events

15 May

Book presentation| Legacies of colonialism in museum collections | Mirjam Shatanawi

21 May

PhD defence | The cultural network: Javanese imaginings of Indonesia, 1918-1966 | Adrian Perkasa

22 May

UUKS seminar | Cropping calendar: Cultural heritage and the politics of knowledge (re)production | Adrian Perkasa
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Latest calls

PhD position religion & slavery

KITLV is looking for a PhD in the study of religion and slavery in the context of Dutch colonialism and its afterlives. 

Atelier Artist Residency 

KITLV and Framer Framed are pleased to announce the open call for the 2025-2026 Atelier KITLV-Framer Framed Artist Residency.

Activities fund 

The Members Association / Vereniging KITLV invites its members to actively contribute to realizing the goals of the Association.

Collection & publication fund

The Members Association / Vereniging KITLV invites its members to contribute to maintaining and expanding its collection. 

Who we are & what we do

The KITLV is a research institute dedicated to the study of societal challenges, focusing on the histories and afterlives of colonialism in the Caribbean, Southeast Asia, and the Netherlands. Our aim is to produce quality research that furthers justice and envisions alternative futures beyond dominant perspectives.

Our research is informed by intimate familiarity with the cultures, histories, and languages of the places we study. Combining history, anthropology, archaeology, political science, linguistics, and the arts, our interdisciplinary perspective is critical and sensitive to marginalised voices. 

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Research Lines

Project

From nomadic nets to fixed shores: Navigating resource access and traditional ecological knowledge in post-sedentary Sea Nomads

The islands and coastlines of Southeast Asia are home to Sea Nomads, including Moken/Moklen, Orang Laut, and Sama-Bajau, each with their own distinct yet related cultural identities, languages, and histories. For centuries, these groups have maintained a close relationship with the ocean, often living nomadic or semi-nomadic lives where their houseboat served as both homes and the primary means of sustenance. 

Project

Trajectories of TASTE: An analytical framework of culinary change after migration

The TASTE Project, funded by the European Research Council and running from June 2024 to the summer of 2029, examines shifting food preferences and culinary change. Centered on three Indonesian diasporas, the project explores how people have adapted their culinary traditions to new environments in the past and continue to reshape them today. In doing so, we scrutinize how cultural, historical, social, economic, and environmental factors operate, intersect, and occasionally conflict in these transformations.

Our work