Indonesians

Indonesians (Indonesian: orang Indonesia) are citizens or people of Indonesia, regardless of their racial, ethnic or religious background. There are more than 600 ethnicities in Indonesia, making it a multicultural archipelagic country with a diversity of languages, culture and religious beliefs. The population of Indonesia according to the 2020 national census was 270.2 million. 56% live on the island of Java, the world's most populous island. Around 95% of Indonesians are Native Indonesians (formerly grouped as "Pribumi"), with 40%Javanese and 15% Sundanese forming the majority, while the other 5% are Indonesians with ancestry from foreign origin, such as Arab Indonesians, …

Wikipedia

Publications

The Asia Foundation · 16 April 2024 English

Getting the New Law on the National Agenda Mobilizing Resources The ratification of the UNCRPD meant that Although the submission of the initial drafts the government was now obliged to …

to shepherd the on which more than 23 million Indonesians draft law through the legislative process. with


AALCO: Asian-African Legal Consultative Organization · 16 April 2024 English

The Verbatim Record of Discussions contains the texts of the statements of the Inaugural Session, the three meetings of the Delegations of the Member States, five general meetings and the …

Honourable Secretary-General of AALCO. We as Indonesians whole heartedly treat our guests who come to


The AI Index · 14 April 2024

Since then, each of these countries has seen a rise in the proportion of respondents acknowledging the benefits of AI, with the Netherlands experiencing the most significant shift. [...] the …

music, and livelihoods, whereas Brazilians, Indonesians, and books. However, skepticism was more prominent


CEIP: Carnegie Endowment for International Peace · 9 April 2024 English

Collectively, a group of emerging powers in Asia, Africa, Latin America, and the Middle East are growing in their geopolitical weight and diplomatic ambition. How closely do they align with …

Jokowi visited Kyiv and Moscow in June 2022, Indonesians called it an “Indomie mission”—a clear indication


World Bank Group · 4 April 2024 English

development. Climate change will impact all Indonesians, but the livelihoods of the poor land users


JLI: Joint Learning Initiative on Faith & Local Communities · 3 April 2024 English

R E L I G I O N S f o r P E A C E | W O R L D F A I T H S D …

communities, claiming instead that almost all Indonesians are Indigenous and that no ethnic group should


AEI: American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research · 2 April 2024 English

The man who has spent the past three decades doing more than anyone to deny Indonesians the right to elect their leaders has now been elected Indonesia’s leader. Riding the coattails and benefiting from

three decades doing more than anyone to deny Indonesians the right to elect their leaders has now been


APO: Asian Productivity Organization · 1 April 2024 English

Net farm income Purchasing power parity (in rupiahs)/units of labor used Risk mitigation mechanism Volume of output access to credit and insurance Prevalence of soil degradation Volume of output/area of …

labor force compared with 82% of men; 8.84% of Indonesians still not having electricity, and 37% or 9 million


DPG: Delhi Policy Group · 30 March 2024 English

The engagement between the regional grouping of Southeast Asian countries, the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), and China will play a critical role in determining the future of security …

a platform for our two Defence Forces - for Indonesians to exercise in Australia and vice versa – it


IUCN: International Union for Conservation of Nature · 28 March 2024 English

Indonesia is about 87% Muslim and 11% Christian. Roughly 242 million Muslims and 29 million Christians live in Indonesia.

of Religious Affairs in 2022. The remaining Indonesians mostly identify as Hindu, Buddhist or Confucian neighbors, compared with two-thirds of Muslims. Indonesians of both religions overwhelmingly prefer a democratic of government. In our 2022 survey, we asked Indonesians to choose between a “democratic form of government” regulates it. The country’s constitution guarantees Indonesians the right to choose their own religion and the card. “No religion” is not an available option. Indonesians who leave the field blank or who choose a religion


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