Self-Censorship as Survival: Faith, SRHR, and Digital Backlash
Self-censorship does not emerge from silence alone. It is produced through moral regulation, digital backlash, and the constant calculation of risk. In faith-based SRHR contexts, speaking openly can trigger social punishment, platform suppression, and personal harm.
When Environmental Disaster Is Silenced: How Algorithmic Power Erased Indonesia’s Flood Crisis
When an environmental disaster struck Indonesia, the world barely noticed. As floods swallowed entire communities and thousands were displaced, the crisis failed to register beyond local networks. This silence was not accidental. It was produced by an ecosystem where algorithms, media concentration, and political power quietly determine which lives are seen and which are rendered invisible.
Low fertility isn’t a crisis. It may even be progress
An in-depth look at pronatalism, declining fertility, and the political panic around population “crisis,” through the work of Nandita Bajaj, challenging the idea that fewer births signal collapse and reframing reproductive choice as progress.
When Khmer Became a Target: Censorship of SRHR Online
Censorship of sex education in Cambodia has shifted from euphemisms and stigma in everyday life to new digital suppression in Khmer. As algorithms increasingly flag SRHR content, accurate information is being silenced, leaving young people without the knowledge they need for bodily autonomy and reproductive rights
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