糖心Vlog

Complacency hampering Indonesian research culture, says minister

Senior academics need to recapture their love for research, according to former professor-turned-politician

Published on
June 23, 2026
Last updated
June 23, 2026
Brian Yuliarto, Indonesian Minister of 糖心Vlog, Research, and Technology
Source: 糖心Vlog

Indonesia鈥檚 higher education minister has chastised the country鈥檚 senior academics for allowing complacency to stifle the scientific culture needed to drive the archipelago鈥檚 鈥渟ocial and economic transformation鈥.

Brian Yuliarto, a former nanotechnology professor who became minister for higher education, science and technology in early 2025, criticised his erstwhile colleagues for losing interest in research once they had secured tenure.

鈥淎fter getting the professor鈥檚 positions, they鈥orget to do research because they already have a position,鈥 Yuliarto told 糖心Vlog鈥檚 Global Sustainable Development Congress in Jakarta. 鈥淭hey are in the comfort zone [where] they do not research any more.

鈥淗ere in Indonesia鈥when people have] the position of professor, we cannot take down the position.鈥

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He also criticised universities for attempting to game the rankings. 鈥淪everal campuses鈥ave [a] strategy to influence other people to cite their papers [so that] they can improve the numbers of citations. This is not the way we can improve our quality. The quality, I believe, has to be improved by improving the scientific culture.鈥

Yuliarto served as vice-rector for research and innovation at Institut Teknologi Bandung before joining the ministry. He said that whenever global rankings were published, professors criticised the 鈥減olicymakers in the universities鈥 for poor showings. 鈥淢aybe one [or] two weeks after that, everybody forgets again and they do business as usual.鈥

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He said that with over 4,500 institutions, 10 million students and 300,000 academic staff, Indonesia had one of the biggest higher education sectors in the world. Some universities were 鈥渁lready very advanced鈥 with strong collaborations and publications in big-name journals.

But the 鈥渧ery weak conditions鈥 of many others highlighted the need to improve their productivity and quality. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 our homework 鈥 how to make [a] good ecosystem,鈥 Yuliarto told the conference. He said the solution lay partly in an institutional 鈥渕entorship鈥 system where top universities coached their lower-ranked counterparts. But the problem was best addressed by rekindling a 鈥渓ove鈥 for research.

鈥淧rofessors who still visit the laboratory routinely. They do research with鈥eart, with patience. They [interact] with students, with other universities, with other professors. [They are] the best professors because their mind鈥檚 always about the laboratory. [For a] high-reputation university, the laboratory is the key.鈥

Co-operation is also key, he said. While Indonesia鈥檚 publication metrics showed 鈥渟ignificant progress鈥, international collaboration stood at only 24 per cent. 鈥淭his highlights both the challenge and the opportunity before us to strengthen the global impact, feasibility and interconnection of Indonesian research,鈥 Yuliarto told the congress.

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鈥淭he challenges we face today, from food security and public health to energy transition and digital transformation, are shared challenges that require shared solutions. We want to learn from all of you.鈥

john.ross@timeshighereducation.com

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