Leaving No One Behind - Outcome 2
The UN in Indonesia believes economic transformation should be gender-sensitive and inclusive, and meet the needs of vulnerable and marginalized communities who are often left behind.
In 2022, UN programming offered crucial support to women owners of micro, small, and medium-sized enterprises (MSMEs), promoted disability inclusion in workplaces and the enhanced economic participation of persons with disabilities, and worked to prioritise the economic participation of marginalized youth.
Future Proofing, Industry 4.0, and the Circular Economy
Training, Skills Development, and Public Education
Agriculture, Food Systems Development and Consumer Protection
Enabling Local Economic Development
Local Firms Equipped for the Global Market
Building Gender- Equal, Child-Friendly Workplaces and Protecting Workers’ Rights
Better Support Services and livelihood opportunities for Refugees, Migrants, and People with Disabilities
Policy Making and Institutional Capacity Building for Inclusive and non-Discriminatory Workplaces
Infographics
7,437 adolescents joined an adolescent engagement programme on 21st century digital and entrepreneurship skills.
The Government integrated livestock evacuation into disaster management efforts, increasing protection for millions of people whose livelihoods depend on farming and livestock
1,523 workplaces received support in conducting COVID-19 risk assessments
8,461 refugees and asylum seekers received humanitarian assistance
Over 200 garment sector factories received support in improving working conditions and competitiveness, benefitting nearly 400,000 workers, some 80% of whom are female
Stories
Feathery palm trees, manicured grass, and a students’ choir greeting visitors — not images one typically associates with industrial parks. But the UNIDO-backed MM 2100 Industrial Town, just outside Jakarta, is no typical industrial park. Or at least, not yet. The bucolic scenes at MM 2100 could soon become commonplace thanks to a regulatory roadmap UNIDO has been developing with Indonesia’s Ministry of Industry to incentivize all industrial parks in the country to become eco-industrial parks.
What is the link between manure and university education? Conservation agriculture, say Seferinus We’e and Krensensiana Nasa, a farming couple living in Nagekeo regency on the island of Flores. Participants in a project supported by FAO and its partners, the Independent Farmer Partners Foundation (YMTM) and World Neighbors, Mr We’e and Ms Nasa have used a palette of farming methods known as conservation agriculture to increase their yields and income three-and-a-half-fold.
Inegena Village Chief Wilfridus Ngala had a vision – to turn his subsistence farming community of 1100 people into an agricultural powerhouse with its own food processing industry and exports. After just a year of support from IFAD and the Ministry of Villages, his vision for Inegena, amidst the central hills of Flores Island, is starting to a become reality. What were once baren lands have been converted into horticulture, and chickens cluck along the formerly tranquil village roads.
A love for fashion design and a keen interest in upcycling inspired Jemi Nikolaus to establish Saparo, his very own zero-waste studio in Semarang, Central Java. Support from UNESCO last year helped him find new customers and improve his marketing. Using textile waste, Mr Nikolaus, 30, produces various products portraying Indonesia's beauty and its diverse cultural landscape, ranging from bags and hats to wall decorations.
Over 160 companies, with a combined work force that runs into the tens of thousands, have promoted gender equality in their business practices and culture through the application of the UN Global Compact and UN Women’s Women’s Empowerment Principles. That’s a more than ten-fold increase in the 14 companies that were applying the principles in 2019.
Life is difficult for most of the around 12,000 refugees in Indonesia, who do not have the right to engage in income-generating activities. But thanks to a local refugee-led organization, Skilled Migrant and Refugee Technicians (SMART), some have been able to improve their IT knowledge and learn various other skills to improve their livelihood prospects.
People with disabilities could, for the first time, connect directly with potential employers in Central Java, Indonesia’s most populous province, through a dedicated job fair organized jointly by the Ministry of Manpower and ILO. Around 500 jobseekers attended the December 2022 event, which was supported by the Indonesian Employers’ Association (APINDO) and Kerjabilitas, the country’s largest online job search platform for persons with disabilities. 172 attendees were able to find a job on the spot, with an additional 79 receiving job counselling from Kerjabilitas.