Trapped in Motion: Youth, Waithood, and the Governance of Mobility in Indonesia's Industrial Periphery
Research Article
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Trapped in Motion: Youth, Waithood, and the Governance of Mobility in Indonesia's Industrial Periphery

Yilin Wang 1*
1 Northeastern University
*Corresponding author: wang.yilin7@northeastern.edu
Published on 30 July 2025
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LNEP Vol.110
ISSN (Print): 2753-7056
ISSN (Online): 2753-7048
ISBN (Print): 978-1-80590-297-3
ISBN (Online): 978-1-80590-298-0
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Abstract

In the context of globalization and regional industrial transformation, increased capital and labor mobility have not always translated into equitable opportunities for young people to secure employment. This paper explores the paradoxical dynamics in Indonesia's industrializing regions, where young people face limited prospects despite their physical mobility and digital connectivity. Drawing on the frameworks of Mobility Justice and Waithood, and supported by Appadurai's notion of the "capacity to aspire," this study investigates skill mismatches between local youth and FDI-driven labor demands, the "modernity trap" in rapidly urbanizing areas, and grassroots responses such as community mutual-aid networks. This paper investigates how structural barriers, institutional neglect, and policy fragmentation create a mobility paradox for Indonesian youth who remain economically excluded despite their physical mobility and aspirational capacity. Public governance strategies including youth-inclusive planning, adaptive vocational education, and equitable labor policies are proposed to transform mobility into justice-oriented empowerment. Findings carry broader relevance for other Global South contexts experiencing similar development challenges.

Keywords:

Youth Mobility, Waithood, Mobility Justice, Public Governance

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Wang,Y. (2025). Trapped in Motion: Youth, Waithood, and the Governance of Mobility in Indonesia's Industrial Periphery. Lecture Notes in Education Psychology and Public Media,110,34-39.

References

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[3]. Appadurai, A. (2004). The capacity to aspire: Culture and the terms of recognition. In V. Rao & M. Walton (Eds.), Culture and public action (pp. 59–84). Stanford University Press.

[4]. Nababan, T. S., & Purba, E. F. (2023). Labour absorption in the manufacturing industry in Indonesia: Anomalous and regressive phenomena. arXiv.

[5]. Brown, E., & Jones, M. (2023). The Indonesian digital workforce gaps in 2021–2025. Sustainability.

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Cite this article

Wang,Y. (2025). Trapped in Motion: Youth, Waithood, and the Governance of Mobility in Indonesia's Industrial Periphery. Lecture Notes in Education Psychology and Public Media,110,34-39.

Data availability

The datasets used and/or analyzed during the current study will be available from the authors upon reasonable request.

About volume

Volume title: Proceedings of ICILLP 2025 Symposium: Digital Governance: Inter-Firm Coopetition and Legal Frameworks for Sustainability

ISBN: 978-1-80590-297-3(Print) / 978-1-80590-298-0(Online)
Editor: Renuka Thakore, Tonejit Gad-Harry
Conference date: 18 September 2025
Series: Lecture Notes in Education Psychology and Public Media
Volume number: Vol.110
ISSN: 2753-7048(Print) / 2753-7056(Online)