KITLV/Royal Netherlands Institute of Southeast Asian and Caribbean Studies

Updates

TRACE: Tracing evolutionary pathways in grassroots climate governance
Presentation Wengki Ariando April 2025

News | Indigenous perspectives in the climate change discourse: Challenges and contributions

15-04-2026

Wengki Ariando's presentation at the Van Vollenhoven Institute, Leiden University, emphasizes the crucial role of Indigenous Peoples and Local Communities (IPLCs) in the global response to the climate crisis. It highlights that IPLCs are not just vulnerable populations, rather, they are essential stewards whose land-sea management practices contribute significantly to carbon sequestration and biodiversity preservation.

IMG 0556

News | Tracing Knowledge-scapes from Java to Leiden: Tenggerese Community and their Sacred Robes

01-01-2026

Tengger Highland on Java Island, Indonesia, has been a tourist attraction since the 19th century because of its picturesque landscapes. During the British interregnum in Java, Thomas Stamford Raffles was responsible for documenting and collecting natural and cultural specimens, including those from Tengger. A multitude of European and North American scholars, military personnel, entrepreneurs, tourists, and others followed his steps towards collecting artifacts from the Tenggerese community.

Evabloem DZH Herta Mohr

Vacancies | Four PhD candidates

30-10-2025

The project Tracing Evolutionary Pathways in Climate Adaptation in Southeast Asia (TRACE), a European Research Council-funded Advance Grant (ERC Adv) led by Professor Diana Suhardiman and hosted by the KITLV in Leiden, is looking for four PhD candidates. The project investigates how evolutionary pathways in climate adaptation are created, sustained, and changed over time.

Curacao

Publication about Trace kopie 2

30-10-2025

The project Tracing Evolutionary Pathways in Climate Adaptation in Southeast Asia (TRACE), a European Research Council-funded Advance Grant (ERC Adv) led by Professor Diana Suhardiman and hosted by the KITLV in Leiden, is looking for four PhD candidates. The project investigates how evolutionary pathways in climate adaptation are created, sustained, and changed over time.