Anu Lounela Author & Editor

Anu Lounela is an Anthropologist and University researcher in Global Development Studies and Social and Cultural Anthropology at the Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Helsinki. Her anthropological research focus on forest and climate change disputes, state formation, frontiers, and more-than-human and land-water relations in the context of all-encompassing environmental crisis with a geographical focus on Central Kalimantan and Java, Indonesia. Some of her recent publications include: Transformation of the Agrarian Landscape and Hope in the Central Kalimantan Peatlands (2026) and Haunting the Factory: Indonesian Modernity and the Spiritual Landscape of Central Kalimantan (2023).

Michaela Haug is Professor of Social and Cultural Anthropology at the University of Freiburg. Her research focuses on socio-ecological transformations and human–forest relations in Indonesia. Her most recent work centres on how competing visions of the future shape forest-use change and related social, economic, and environmental processes in East Kalimantan. She is the author of Framing the Future through the Lens of Hope: Environmental Change, Diverse Hopes and the Challenge of Engagement (2020) and co-editor, with Timo Duile, Kristina Großmann, and Guido Sprenger, of Plural Ecologies in Southeast Asia: Hierarchies, Conflicts, and Coexistence (Routledge, 2023).

Christian Oesterheld is currently Chair of the Social Science Division at Mahidol University International College (MUIC) in Nakhonpathom/Thailand, where he teaches anthropology, sociology and conflict studies. He has been engaged in long-term field-research in Kalimantan since 2000, working on ethnic conflicts between indigenous Dayak communities and Madurese migrants between 2000-2007 and, since 2007, on the ethnography and cultural history of Mahakam Ulu Regency.

Kenneth Sillander is senior university lecturer at the Swedish School of Social Science, University of Helsinki. He has conducted long-term ethnographic research with the Bentian Dayak of Indonesian Borneo since the 1990s. His research interests include kinship, religion, rituals, naming, ethnicity, values, and sociality. He has edited Anarchic Solidarity (2011), Ancestors in Borneo Societies (2012), and Human Nature and Social Life (2017), and the special issues Belonging in Borneo: Refiguring Dayak Ethnicity in Indonesia (2016), Qualifying Sociality through Values (2021), and Borneo Youth: Anxieties and Aspirations for Uncertain Futures (2024).