Soetoro-Ng is currently a faculty specialist for the
Spark M. Matsunaga Institute for Peace and Conflict Resolution, which is based in the College of Social Sciences at the
University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa, as well as a consultant for the Obama Foundation's Leaders Program: Asia-Pacific. Dr. Soetoro-Ng teaches courses on: Peace Education; the History of Peace Movements; and Leadership for Social Change. She also oversees
externships for undergraduates who are majoring or minoring in Peace Studies and coordinates the institute's community and global
service learning programs. Soetoro-Ng was an assistant professor at the Institute for Teacher Education at the University of Hawai'i College of Education and continues to do some consulting work, promoting international exchange and understanding, in partnership with the East West Center. She authored a children's book,
Ladder to the Moon, that was inspired by her mother and her daughter, Suhaila; it was published in 2011. She is working on a book about peace education and a young adult novel entitled Yellowood. Soetoro-Ng was a high school history teacher at
La Pietra: Hawaii School for Girls and the
Education Laboratory School, both in
Honolulu, Hawaii. She previously taught and developed curriculum at The Learning Project, an alternative public
middle school in
New York City, from 1996 to 2000. In 2009, Soetoro-Ng helped bring her mother's dissertation to publication in the form of the book
Surviving against the Odds: Village Industry in Indonesia. She wrote a foreword to the book and participated in its launch at the American Anthropological Association annual meeting. In 2019, Soetoro-Ng, along with Todd Shuster and Jennifer Gates cofounded The Peace Studio: a non-profit organization whose mission is to support, train and unite the next generation of artists, journalists and storytellers to inspire people everywhere to become active peacebuilders. in
Denver, Colorado.
Research Soetoro-Ng's doctoral research at the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa focused on Multicultural and International Education. She examined the use of narrative to develop more complex understandings of identity in multicultural classrooms. She promoted the learning of Social Studies—history and current events—from multiple perspectives. She has developed and implemented peace education curricula in public high schools and for K-12 teachers in Colleges of Education. With partner Kerrie Urosevich, she founded the nonprofit Ceeds of Peace (ceedsofpeace.org), which connects families, community leaders and educators in a 360 degree approach to raise and educate peacebuilding leaders. With environmental law professor Maxine Burkett, she co-founded the nonprofit, Institute for Climate and Peace (www.climateandpeace.org) which works for
climate justice at the intersection of climate change and positive peacebuilding.
Obama presidential campaigns In May 2007, Soetoro-Ng announced that she would assist Obama in his campaign for presidency, and took two months off to campaign for him. She participated in the
2008 Democratic National Convention, where she spoke briefly about growing up with her brother and brought an Asian-American presence to the stage. Soetoro-Ng also spoke briefly about the Obama administration's accomplishments at the
2012 Democratic National Convention in
Charlotte, North Carolina, on September 4, 2012, sharing the podium with First Lady
Michelle Obama's older brother, former
Oregon State University men's basketball team head coach,
Craig Robinson. ==Personal life==