Asti Inayah
Universitas Jenderal Soedirman

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Analisis Kelembagaan dan Kerangka Regulatif Pemerintah Daerah dalam Literasi Media Keluarga Syarafina Dyah Amalia; Dwiki Oktobrian; Asti Inayah; Tenang Haryanto
PROGRESIF: Jurnal Hukum Vol 20 No 1 (2026): PROGRESIF : Jurnal Hukum
Publisher : Fakultas Hukum Universitas Bangka Belitung

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.33019/ys58qm26

Abstract

This study analyses local government institutions and regulatory frameworks in mainstreaming family media literacy in Indonesia. Digital transformation poses challenges for families, including exposure to misinformation, harmful content, and weak information verification skills. Local governments are in a strategic position through their authority over education, public communication, child protection, and community literacy. However, the results of the study show that there is no clear institutional structure and no regional regulations that explicitly regulate family media literacy. This study uses a normative-juridical method through a statute and conceptual approach to map legal gaps, overlapping authorities, and inconsistencies between national and regional regulations. The main findings indicate institutional fragmentation, institutional void, and obscurity of norms as obstacles to the implementation of family media literacy. A comparison with international standards (UNESCO MIL, UK Online Media Literacy Strategy, and Japan's Family ICT Framework) shows that Indonesia lags behind in providing a local regulatory architecture. This study offers an ideal regulatory model based on four pillars: regulation, inter-agency coordination, programme standardisation, and family-based indicator evaluation. The results of this study contribute theoretically to strengthening the study of local government law and practically to the drafting of a Regional Regulation on Family Media Literacy.
Women in the Frankincense Value Chain: A Review of Customary Law and Gender Equality in Tapanuli Muhammad Ikhsan Lubis; Asti Inayah; Salman Paris Harahap; Bahar Elfudllatsani; Adhita Pradana
Gloria Justitia Vol 6 No 1 (2026): JURNAL GLORIA JUSTITIA
Publisher : Fakultas Hukum Universitas Katolik Indonesia Atma Jaya

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.25170/gloriajustitia.v6i1.7908

Abstract

Frankincense is not only an economic commodity but also a cultural entity governed by a strong customary law system in the communities that produce it, such as Tapanuli. In a customary law system that is often patriarchal, the position of women requires deeper examination. This study stems from a contradictory portrait: on one hand, women are actively involved in the frankincense value chain, yet on the other hand, their contributions are often unrecorded and marginalized, and they lack legal recognition and economic compensation. This study used a qualitative approach with a case study method in North Tapanuli. Data were collected through in-depth interviews with key informants (women artisans, customary elders, and female community leaders), participatory observation of the incense processing process, and a study of documents related to local customary rules. Data were analyzed interactively through data reduction, data presentation, and conclusion drawing techniques. The research findings show that women play a central and critical role in the post-harvest and processing stages, which determine the quality and market value of the incense. However, prevailing customary laws tend to position women in the domestic sphere and deny them access to strategic decision-making, tree ownership, and fair distribution of economic benefits. Their contributions are often categorized as 'assistance' or 'domestic obligations' rather than as economically valuable 'work' and thus are not valued equally with men's contributions. There is a significant gap between women's actual economic contributions to the Frankincense value chain and the recognition and protection provided by customary law. To achieve gender justice and women's economic empowerment, a more inclusive reinterpretation or revitalization of customary law is needed, without eroding core cultural values.