Linda is an anthropology graduate from Universitas Gadjah Mada with a strong interest in human–nature relations, wildlife conservation, and education. Her work centers on ethnographic research and storytelling, focusing on how people relate to the natural world around them. She has previously conducted ethnographic studies on sea turtle conservation practices in Goa Cemara, Yogyakarta; bee conservation movements in Freiburg, Germany; and human–komodo dragon interactions in Flores, East Nusa Tenggara. She also contributed to a marine and coral conservation education program in Buleleng, Bali. For the past four years, Linda has been working as a communication specialist for rhino conservation programs in Indonesia, drawing on her field experience and narrative skills—whether in a forest with her camera or deep in community dialogues—to make conservation stories more human and more real.
L: linkedin.com/in/linda-fitria-31438a117
Email: lindafitria@sokola.org