RAHMATIKA, MAULA FADHILATA
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ANALISIS DAYA DUKUNG PARIWISATA SYARIAH DAN KONTRIBUSINYA TERHADAP KESEJAHTERAAN EKONOMI MASYARAKAT LOKAL (Studi Kasus: Pantai Pulau Santen, Banyuwangi) RAHMATIKA, MAULA FADHILATA
Jurnal Ilmiah Mahasiswa FEB Vol. 6 No. 2
Publisher : Fakultas Ekonomi dan Bisnis Universitas Brawijaya

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Abstract

Suatu daerah akan mengalami kemajuan pesat jika pemerintah daerah bersama masyarakat mampu mengembangkan potensi lokal dengan berbagai inovasi yang beragam. Penelitian ini bertujuan untuk mendiskripsikan ragam daya dukung pariwisata dan pengoperasionalannya yang ada di Pantai Pulau Santen, mendeskripsikan pemberdayaan masyarakat setempat dalam pengelolaan daya dukung pariwisata pada Pantai Pulau Santen, dan mendeskripsikan kebermaknaan perangkat pendukung pariwisata dalam meningkatkan kesejahteraan ekonomi masyarakat lokal. Penelitian dilakukan di lingkungan Pantai Pulau Santen kabupaten Banyuwangi, Jawa Timur dengan pendekatan kualitatif dan rancangan studi kasus. Data dikumpulkan melalui observasi partisipatif, in-depth interview, dan  analisis dokumen. Dengan analisis data interaktif ditemukan bahwa Pantai Pulau Santen memiliki potensi pariwisata yang dapat meningkatkan kesejahteraan ekonomi masyarakat lokal akan tetapi belum diolah secara optimal baik oleh pemerintah dan masyarakat.Kata kunci: Perekonomian masyarakat, inovasi, pariwisata syariah Pantai Pulau Santen.
Implementing the Circular Economy for Sustainable Development, by Hans Wiesmeth, Amsterdam, Netherlands: Elsevier, 2020. 318 pp., $105. ISBN: 9780128217986 Rahmatika, Maula Fadhilata
Global Economic, Social, and Development Review Vol. 29 No. 1 (2025): Global Economic, Social, and Development Review (GESDR)
Publisher : Economics Departement, Faculty of Business and Economics, Universitas Surabaya

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.24123/gesdr.v29i1.8554

Abstract

Book Review: Implementing the Circular Economy for Sustainable Development, by Hans Wiesmeth, Amsterdam, Netherlands: Elsevier, 2020. 318 pp., $105. ISBN: 9780128217986
Who Gets Included in Community Supported Agriculture? Governance Design, Transaction Costs, and Socio-Demographic Patterns among Small Organic Farmers in Indonesia Rahmatika, Maula Fadhilata; Mulyaningsih, Sri; Ulayya, Amira Hasnanuha
International Journal of Emerging Research and Review Vol. 4 No. 1 (2026): March
Publisher : IKIP Widya Darma Surabaya

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.56707/ijoerar.v4i1.161

Abstract

Objective: This study aims to examine how Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) governance design shapes the socio-demographic inclusion of small organic farmers. While CSA has gained attention as an alternative agri-food system, existing research remains predominantly consumer-oriented and provides limited explanation of how different categories of farmers are included or excluded. This study addresses this gap by reframing farmer participation as an institutional outcome rather than an individual choice. Method: The study adopts a qualitative comparative case study approach, focusing on two contrasting CSA models in Mojokerto, Indonesia. Data were collected through in-depth interviews with 38 farmers, CSA managers, and coordinators, complemented by document analysis and field observations. Guided by Transaction Cost Economics (TCE), qualitative data were analyzed using Atlas.ti through a deductive–inductive thematic analysis followed by cross-case comparison. Results: The findings show that CSA governance design plays a decisive role in shaping farmer inclusion. Decentralized, community-based governance relies on peer coordination and informal monitoring, effectively favoring experienced, land-owning farmers with strong social embeddedness. In contrast, centralized, organization-led governance internalizes coordination, monitoring, and certification costs, lowering entry barriers for younger, landless, or less experienced farmers, albeit with reduced autonomy. Socio-demographic characteristics thus emerge as reflections of governance compatibility rather than direct determinants of participation.  Novelty: This study contributes to CSA scholarship by conceptualizing farmer inclusion as an institutional outcome shaped by transaction cost allocation. By extending Transaction Cost Economics to alternative agri-food networks, it provides a governance-based explanation of inclusion and exclusion dynamics in CSA, particularly in developing-country contexts.