I am an Associate Professor of Anthropology at the University of Amsterdam, affiliated with the AISSR program group Moving Matters. I obtained my PhD at the University of Amsterdam, with a dissertation on the Indonesian student movement, and conducted postdoctoral research at the Erasmus University Rotterdam on Indonesia’s globalizing heritage industry, before returning to the University of Amsterdam. Between 2020-2024, I held multiple visiting fellowships at the ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute in Singapore, for research projects on 1) digitally mediated youth movements, 2) cyber troops and online influence operations, in Indonesia and other Southeast Asian countries (a topic elaborated in two subsequent projects funded by KNAW-grants), and 3) social media and Indonesia's 2024 elections. Overall, my recent research has focused on the interplay between repression, resistance, and resilience in a world where power, politics, and struggle move into the cybersphere, with real-world effects.
Currently, I am the PI of a 5-year project called Activist Techtopias: Crafting Alternate Infrastructures of Resistance in Asia (AlterTech), funded by a European Research Council (ERC) Consolidator Grant. AlterTech is an ethnographic study of how rights and grassroots movements in Asia navigate deepening digital repression by experimenting with new practices and uses of technologies (‘technological craftmanship’), both to dodge the repression and to disrupt the infrastructures that enable it. It investigates how political and technological action intersect and how movement infrastructures are reconfigured in a context of increasing algorithmic control and surveillance, characterized by the melding of ‘digital authoritarianism’ and ‘digital colonialism’. By decentring the digital in our concept of technology, and viewing movements through the lens of infrastructure, the project aims to uncover and analyse how a novel type of technopolitics is evolving through recent convergences and collaborations in practices of resistance and everyday struggle. Inspired by decolonial epistemology and using a multi-modal collaborative methodology, AlterTech seeks not only to analyse these processes but also to actively engage in them.
I am also the director of the Master’s Cultural and Social Anthropology at the University of Amsterdam, a member of the board of the European Association for Southeast Asian Studies (EuroSEAS), and a member of the board of the magazine Inside Indonesia. My book on the Indonesian student movement and an edited volume on digital technologies and democracy in Southeast Asia are forthcoming.