
Charlie Meidino Albajili is a human rights lawyer and researcher with extensive experience advancing human rights and environmental justice in Southeast Asia, particularly in Indonesia.
He spent seven years at the Jakarta Legal Aid Institute, leading collaborative, research-based advocacy that drove major policy reforms. His work included a landmark 2021 court victory on Jakarta’s air pollution, which prompted the government to adopt a human rights-based pollution control plan, and a 2022 court victory on mental health disability discrimination, which spurred reforms to protect the rights of disabled public servants.
Charlie later joined Greenpeace Southeast Asia as an Urban Justice Campaigner, where he built cross-sectoral coalitions and led policy engagement to promote rights-based climate action. He also worked as an expert consultant for several NGOs, including Engage Media, supporting their campaign strategy on the impact of Indonesia’s new penal code on digital freedom, and the TIFA Foundation on strengthening protection for human rights and environmental defenders.
His recent research includes contributions to the Centre for Economic and Social Rights (CESR) and the Global Initiative for Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (GI-ESCR), focusing on rights-based climate finance and rights-based economy.
He holds a Master of Laws in Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights from the University of Essex, as a Chevening Scholar, and a Bachelor’s degree in Law from Parahyangan Catholic University.