The world's traditionally hunting and gathering societies generally interact actively with their settled agricultural neighbours and are increasingly integrated into local economies. This brings major challenges and lifestyle changes, impacting mobility, diet and health. The detailed biological impacts of this transition are, however, poorly characterised – from changing social systems impacting human genetic diversity, to closer relationships with domestic animals, to changing microbiome diversity and pathogen risk. The MOBILE project is investigating how lifestyle changes impact tropical forest hunter-gatherer groups in Indonesia. The goals are twofold – to document and understand transitions and their impacts on present-day biological diversity and health, and to apply computational modelling to infer how social behaviour impacted biological variation among tropical forest hunter-gatherers in the past. The first goal will provide critical context for understanding present-day patterns of human and microbial diversity in society more broadly. The second goal offers evolutionary context, revealing the scales at which human behaviour, including our mobility and social networks, impacts diversity, and potentially structures adaptive evolution. The project combines surveys, remote mobility sensing, whole-community genomics and detailed simulation to link community diversity to evolutionary processes.