30-04-2026
The 16th Silvia de Groot Fund research grant was awarded to Danick Trouwloon for her research on Curaçao and the wider Caribbean and Ine Apapoe for her research on Suriname. The aim of the fund is to financially support young Caribbean students or researchers with their research on Caribbean history or culture.
30-4-2026
The 5th Philippus Corts Fund grant was awarded to Bernard Kleikamp for his music project and to Niels Mathijssen and Wengki Ariando, Louie Buana and Adrian Perkasa for their book projects. The goal of the fund is to support research and publications on the shared history of Indonesia and The Netherlands in the period 1602–1949.
10-04-2026
Karwan Fatah-Black is benoemd tot UNESCO Leerstoelhouder Comparative History of Slavery and the Transition to Citizenship aan de Universiteit Leiden (UL). Karwan is senior onderzoeker bij het KITLV en historicus aan de UL. Deze nieuwe leerstoel onderzoekt de overgang van slavernij naar burgerschap in vergelijkend perspectief.
Junior onderzoeker 'Het koloniale verleden van de Belastingdienst en Douane - Suriname en de Cariben'.
Deadline: 31 mei
Junior onderzoeker 'Het koloniale verleden van de Belastingdienst en Douane - Indonesië'.
Deadline: 31 mei
Postdoc Onderzoeker Belastingdienst & Douane.
Deadline: 31 mei
The Vereniging KITLV invites members to submit applications to its funds.
Deadline: 15 September
The KITLV is a research institute dedicated to the study of societal challenges, focusing on the histories and afterlives of colonialism in the Caribbean, Southeast Asia, and the Netherlands. Our aim is to produce quality research that furthers justice and envisions alternative futures beyond dominant perspectives.
Our research is informed by intimate familiarity with the cultures, histories, and languages of the places we study. Combining history, anthropology, archaeology, political science, linguistics, and the arts, our interdisciplinary perspective is critical and sensitive to marginalised voices.
Expensive elections campaigns are a threat to democracies around the world, because they generate corruption and political inequality. Yet, due to methodological obstacles and a western bias in the current literature, we do not really know what makes election campaigns expensive.
The islands and coastlines of Southeast Asia are home to Sea Nomads, including Moken/Moklen, Orang Laut, and Sama-Bajau, each with their own distinct yet related cultural identities, languages, and histories. For centuries, these groups have maintained a close relationship with the ocean, often living nomadic or semi-nomadic lives where their houseboat served as both homes and the primary means of sustenance.
The Royal Netherlands Institute of Southeast Asian and Caribbean Studies (KITLV) has been commissioned by the Dutch Ministry of Education, Culture, and Science to advance international knowledge cooperation regarding the history of slavery in Indonesia, South Africa, and Suriname.
Driven by the increasing public awareness of the impact of hurricanes and the devastation of coastal areas, Island(er)s at the Helm contributes to equipping (Dutch) Caribbean societies with proficient tools for confronting these challenging climatic phenomena.
Climate change demands urgent action, yet global climate governance is at an impasse, unable to inclusive, just, and nested adaptive strategies. TRACE pusher for a paradigm shift in climate governance. It aims to amplify grassroots forces and spearheading systematic transformations, focusing on Southeast.
The TASTE Project, funded by the European Research Council and running from June 2024 to the summer of 2029, examines shifting food preferences and culinary change. Centered on three Indonesian diasporas, the project explores how people have adapted their culinary traditions to new environments in the past and continue to reshape them today. In doing so, we scrutinize how cultural, historical, social, economic, and environmental factors operate, intersect, and occasionally conflict in these transformations.
A project on the coloniality of Asian library and manuscript-formations. With KITLV Special Collections as point of departure, we study the social biographies of manuscripts, and the colonial histories of collecting, to gain insight into the role of violence therein, and to recognize local agency in the makings of so-called Asian Libraries.
Our publications
De verwevenheid tussen de stad Alkmaar, de omliggende dorpen en het koloniale slavernijverleden bleef lang verborgen. Dit boek onthult, in opdracht van de gemeente Alkmaar en ondersteund door het Regionaal Archief Alkmaar, deze nog onbekende kant van de geschiedenis.
Our publications
This article examines how the idea of “finding potential” has structured colonial and postcolonial interventions in Papua’s wetlands. Tracing its genealogy from Dutch colonial science to Indonesian state-led development, it argues that potentiality operates as both an epistemic framework and a political tool that renders wetlands as idle and exploitable.
KITLV Journals
The latest issue of the NWIG (volume 100: issue 1-2) is now available, with articles on the Caribbean in the fields of humanities, social & political science, archaeology, economics, geography and geology.
Our publications
This book review discusses State of Fear by Joshua Barker (2024), which examines how policing and state power in postcolonial Indonesia operate through a mix of formal institutions, informal actors, and community practices in Bandung.
Our publications
In this review of Hearsay is not excluded by Michael Dove (2024) in the Journal of Political Ecology, Hatib Kadir explores the uneasy boundary between science and people’s everyday knowledge.
Our publications
This chapter in the edited volume Routledge Handbook of Contemporary Laos unpacks the institutional disjuncture in the hydropower decision-making landscape and processes in the Mekong region.