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The 9th International Symposium of Jurnal Antropologi Indonesia

By Maret 16, 2026Maret 31st, 2026No Comments8 min read

The 9th International Symposium of Jurnal Antropologi Indonesia

Pluriversal Futures in a Multipolarising World: Global South Perspectives

4-7 August 2026
FISIP Universitas Indonesia, Depok Campus

The early twenty-first century has witnessed a profound transformation in the global political landscape. The dominance of a single geopolitical order is gradually giving way to an increasingly multipolar world, shaped by shifting political-economic alliances, competing political projects, emergent regional powers, and new forms of South–South cooperation. These changes are reshaping international governance, economic flows, technological infrastructures, and environmental politics. For communities across the Global South, such geopolitical shifts are experienced not only through policy and diplomacy but also in the intimacy of everyday life—affecting livelihoods, aspirations, and imaginaries of the future.

Anthropology offers critical tools for understanding how these global realignments are lived, negotiated, and resisted. Rather than assuming a universal trajectory of modernity anchored in Western political and economic models, anthropologists increasingly draw on pluriversal perspectives (Blaser & de la Cadena 2018; Escobar 2020). These perspectives recognize that multiple, coexisting worlds—ontological, political, and ecological—shape social life. A pluriversal lens rejects the notion of a single hegemonic global future and instead insists on the legitimacy of many futures rooted in diverse histories, cosmologies, and social projects.

This symposium theme brings together these two strands: the geopolitics of multipolarisation and the anthropological imperative to engage with pluriversality. It asks how emerging global configurations create both cultural possibilities and tensions for alternative futures in the Global South, and how different communities mobilize relational, ethical, ecological, and historical resources to shape their place in a rapidly shifting world order. Anthropologists can ground these geopolitical transformations in their articulation with specific socio-cultural realities, revealing how global international orders and planetary environmental shifts intersect with inequality, gender, kinship, livelihoods, land struggles, climate crises, and everyday hopes and uncertainties.

The idea of pluriversal futures foregrounds the existence of multiple, co-produced visions of what a good and livable life entails. In many parts of the Global South, futures are crafted through indigenous and spiritual ontologies, alternative economies and solidarities, ritual and moral worlds, provincialized modern scientific values and practices, multispecies relationalities, community care, mutual aid, social reproduction, local ecological knowledge, climate adaptation, and political imagination from below. These futures often stand in tension with dominant geopolitical narratives—whether neoliberal, nationalist, developmentalist, or technocratic. A pluriversal approach therefore highlights the creative and relational worlds that people build in the interstices of global structures.

Significance for the Global South

The Global South is not merely receiving the effects of multipolarisation; it is actively shaping emerging world orders. Across Asia, Africa, the Middle East, Latin America, and Oceania, new forms of South–South cooperation, regional cultural politics, environmental negotiations, and technological partnerships are transforming how societies envision their future place in the world.

Indonesia, with its own diplomatic and cultural projects, is uniquely positioned to contribute to these transformations. Its complex assemblage of Indigenous worlds, religious pluralities, ecological challenges, and ongoing political transformations makes it a critical site for exploring how pluriversal futures are crafted within a multipolarising global landscape.

This symposium therefore positions the Global South as an epistemic center rather than a periphery, offering conceptual innovations and grounded ethnographic insights that contribute to broader debates on global transformations.

Objectives of the Symposium

  1. To illuminate how geopolitical multipolarisation is experienced, interpreted, and contested through everyday life, cultural practices, and local politics.
  2. To foreground pluriversal approaches that highlight diverse ontologies, ethical worlds, and alternative visions of the future.
  3. To promote anthropological scholarship that centers Global South perspectives in understanding contemporary global transformations.
  4. To explore multispecies, ecological, spiritual, and relational forms of future-making in the context of environmental crises.
  5. To create a space for interdisciplinary and multimodal dialogue on the intersection of geopolitics, ethics, care, and local world-building practices.

Accepted Panel

The Steering Committee is currently reviewing the panel proposals that have been submitted. The announcement of accepted panels will be made no later than 23 March 2026.

1

"Perahu, Sailors, and Sailing Traditions in Indonesia: Socio-Cultural Dynamics, Challenges, and Future Pathways"
2

Addressing the Polyphonic Voices and the Increasing Complexity of Human Life: Developing Diverse Ethnographic Genres.
3

After the Grid: Renewable Frontiers, the Politics of Life, and the (Un/)Governance of Possible Futures.
4

Antrophological Turn in IR? Limits and Possibilities.
5

Beyond Capital Flows: Social and Cultural Dimensions of China-Indonesia Economic Cooperation in Everyday Life.
6

Beyond Compliance: Social Safeguards, Financial Governance, and Pluriversal Justice in Indonesia’s Development Practice.
7

Commodity Geology and Indigenous Geological Governance in Southeast Asia.
8

Contesting Extractivism: Disability, Environmental Justice, and Pluriversal Futures in the Global South.
9

Cosmopolitan Imaginations, Pluriversal Futures, and the Making of Local Space.
10

Decolonizing Anthropology Beyond the Neoliberal University.
11

Governing Death in the City: Urban Care, Precarity, and Pluriversal Futures.
12

Indigenous Multi-species Community of Life and Indonesia’s Regime of War in Papua: collaborative action-research practice.
13

Life in Extraction Zones: Everyday Struggles at the Frontiers of a Resource State.
14

Lived experiences and politics of maladaptation within global environmental governance of climate change in Southeast Asia.
15

Mangkrak: When Infrastructure Refuses to Function — An STS and Anthropological Inquiry.
16

Multiversality of Care in Indonesian Visual Art and Contemporary Practice.
17

Navigating Futurities in Transmigration Areas: Cultural Encounters, Ecology, and the Imagination of Living Spaces in the Contact Zone.
18

Nurturing Pluriversal Futures: Multispecies Entanglements, Ontological Resilience, and Decolonial Engagement in Taiwan.
19

Occupy and conquer them! between the domination of militarism and extractivism, and the resistance of people-at-the margins in Indonesia.
20

Pluriversal Futures in Practice: Multimodal Ethnography, Data Justice, and Everyday Transformation.
21

Pluriversality of Childhood in Global South: Imagining Global Solidarity, Agency, and More-than-Human World.
22

Queer Pluriversality and World-Making in/through Heteronormative Times.
23

Regenerative Listening and Anthropological Thinking for Pluriversality.
24

Revisiting Purification: Muhammadiyah, Local Culture, and Pluriversal Islam in Indonesia.
25

Screening Health: Digital Platforms and the Reconfiguration of Bodies, Expertise, and Care in a Multipolarising World.
26

Sino-Indo Mutual Learning and Cooperation in a Multipolarising World.
27

The Administered Dream: Esports, Digital Reification, and the Paradox of Pluriversality in the Global South.

Keydates

  • Call for Panel (closed): 28 February 2026
  • Panel acceptance notification: 23 March 2026
  • Call for Abstract: 30 March 2026 – 18 May 2026
  • Call for non-paper Submission: 30 March 2026 – 18 May 2026
  • Submission acceptance notification: 1 June 2026
  • Registration: 2 June – 20 July 2026
  • Symposium: 4 – 7 August 2026

Venue

The 9th International Symposium of Journal Antropologi Indonesia (ISJAI 9) will be held at the Faculty of Social and Political Sciences (FISIP), Universitas Indonesia, located at the Universitas Indonesia Campus in Depok, West Java, Indonesia.

Access to the Venue

From Soekarno–Hatta International Airport (CGK)

Soekarno–Hatta International Airport in Jakarta is the nearest international airport serving participants arriving from abroad. There are several options to reach Universitas Indonesia from the airport:

  • Taxi or Ride-hailing services
Participants may take airport taxis or ride-hailing services such as Grab or Gojek. The travel time is approximately 60–90 minutes, depending on traffic conditions.
  • Airport Rail Link + Commuter Line
Participants may take the Airport Rail Link (KA Bandara) from the airport to Manggarai Station or BNI City Station, then transfer to the Jakarta Commuter Line (KRL) toward Bogor and get off at Universitas Indonesia Station or Pondok Cina Station, both located within walking distance of the campus.

From Halim Perdanakusuma International Airport (HLP)

Halim Perdanakusuma Airport mainly serves domestic flights and is located in East Jakarta. Participants may reach Universitas Indonesia by:

  • Taxi or Ride-hailing services
Travel time is approximately 30–45 minutes, depending on traffic conditions.
  • Taxi + Commuter Line (KRL)
Participants may travel to Manggarai Station by taxi or ride-hailing service and then take the Commuter Line (Bogor line) toward Bogor, stopping at Universitas Indonesia Station or Pondok Cina Station.

From Jakarta City Center

Participants staying in central Jakarta may use the Commuter Line (KRL) with the Bogor line and stop at Universitas Indonesia Station or Pondok Cina Station. Travel time from central Jakarta is approximately 40–60 minutes.

From Nearby Train Stations

  • Universitas Indonesia Station – located inside the UI campus and about 10–15 minutes walking distance from FISIP UI.
  • Pondok Cina Station – another nearby station with access to the northern side of the campus and local transportation options.

Local Transportation

Within the Universitas Indonesia campus, participants may use:

  • Campus shuttle buses
  • Ride-hailing services (online taxibike)
  • Local taxis
  • Walking paths across the campus

Accommodation

Various hotels and guesthouses are available in Depok and South Jakarta, many of which are within 15–30 minutes travel time from the Universitas Indonesia campus. Further information on recommended accommodation and transportation will be provided soon.

Committee

Steering Committee:

Keynote Speakers

Information regarding the keynote speakers will be announced in due course.

Submit Abstract

All paper abstracts must be submitted exclusively through the Universitas Indonesia Open Conference System (OCS): https://conference.ui.ac.id

We will not accept or consider abstracts submitted via email or through any other channels.

Non-paper Submission

In addition to conventional academic papers, the symposium also welcomes non-paper submissions that engage with the theme Pluriversal Futures in a Multipolarising World: Global South Perspectives. Scholars, researchers, artists, filmmakers, and practitioners are invited to present their work in alternative formats that explore anthropological ideas and ethnographic insights beyond the traditional written paper.

Submissions may take the form of books, exhibitions, or films that address issues relevant to the symposium theme, including cultural transformations, indigenous knowledge, ecological relations, social movements, or alternative imaginaries of the future emerging from the Global South. These formats provide important ways of communicating anthropological knowledge by engaging visual, narrative, and material dimensions of social life, allowing audiences to experience ethnographic realities through multiple sensory and interpretive perspectives.

All non-paper submissions will also undergo a review process by the symposium’s academic committee to ensure their relevance to the symposium theme and their contribution to scholarly dialogue. By opening space for non-paper contributions, the symposium aims to encourage multimodal and interdisciplinary forms of knowledge production, highlighting how anthropological research can circulate not only through academic texts but also through visual media, artistic practices, and public scholarship. These alternative modes of presentation enrich the symposium and bring diverse voices and creative practices into conversations about pluriversal futures in a rapidly changing world.

Conference Fee

  • International Presenter and Participant: USD 150
  • International Student: USD 100
  • Indonesia Presenter and Participant: IDR 1.000.000
  • Indonesia Student: IDR 500.000

Important notes:
The registration fee for this symposium is set lower than in previous years, as it does not include daily lunch. The organizing committee will provide one welcoming dinner on the first day and coffee break snacks twice a day during the symposium. Participants may purchase lunch at the campus canteens or at the food bazaar available at the venue from 4–7 August 2026.

Contact Us

For any inquiries, please contact us at email: simposiumjai@gmail.com