Claim Missing Document
Check
Articles

Found 2 Documents
Search

Women’s Access To Justice: Mediation For The Victims of Domestic Violence In Central Java, Indonesia Sukendar, Sukendar; Saifullah, Muhammad; Sulistiyanto, Priyambudi; Rahman, Luthfi; Ulamai, A. Hasan Asy'ari
Samarah: Jurnal Hukum Keluarga dan Hukum Islam Vol 7, No 1 (2023): Samarah: Jurnal Hukum Keluarga dan Hukum Islam
Publisher : Islamic Family Law Department, Sharia and Law Faculty, Universitas Islam Negeri Ar-Raniry

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.22373/sjhk.v7i1.9471

Abstract

Most of women victims of domestic violence in Indonesia avoid criminal justice system in resolving their cases because criminal justice system gives financial, psychological, and social burdens for them. They accessed the Religious Court instead and other institutions that implements mediation to resolve their cases. This fact gives wider opportunity for mediation, which is a form of restorative justice system, to be a better alternative dispute resolution for domestic violence cases in Indonesia. Unlike retributive justice system that focuses on punishing the perpetrators, restorative justice system focuses on rehabilitation of the rights of the victims. This research explores mediation conducted by service providers for the victims of domestic violence in the Central Java Province, Indonesia. Data collected through interviews with judges, police, social workers, and religious figures from social organizations. This research found that mediation for the victims of domestic violence has been carried out by the services institutions for the victims of domestic violence both in the court and outside the court. However, not all mediations conducted properly as some mediators both in-court and non-court have not been trained on mediation. There is also a tendency among one service provider to proceed all cases of domestic violence in the criminal court while others want to proceed through mediation, which sparks some internal conflicts among them. This research enriches the literature on the services for the victims of domestic violence and provides some insights for alternative resolution for domestic violence cases in Indonesia and especially in Central Java.
Expanding Religious Freedom Through Organizational Forms: Kebatinan, Sufism and The Global Growth Movement in Indonesia’s Spiritual Training Industry Muttaqin, Ahmad; Sulistiyanto, Priyambudi
Al-Jami'ah: Journal of Islamic Studies Vol 62, No 2 (2024)
Publisher : Al-Jami'ah Research Centre

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.14421/ajis.2024.622.363-385

Abstract

In Indonesia, the practice of religious freedom remains deeply contested, with marginal spiritual movements often subject to stricter limitations than their officially recognized counterparts. This paper investigates two hybrid spiritual groups in contemporary Indonesia, Bhakti Nusantara and Bionergi, based in Yogyakarta, which integrate elements of Javanese spiritual traditions (Kebatinan), Sufism, and facets of the Global Growth Movement. Despite their syncretic practices, these organizations occupy a distinctive social position that grants them greater latitude in religious and spiritual expression. By comparing them with other fringe spiritual movements that have faced criticism and blasphemy charges, this paper argues that their status as spiritual or religious corporations enables them to enjoy broader freedoms. This distinction highlights the complexities of religious freedom and its dynamic governance in Indonesia, where the legal and social treatment of spiritual groups can vary significantly depending on their organizational shape and social location.[Di Indonesia, praktik kebebasan beragama tetap menjadi isu yang masih sering diperdebatkan dan gerakan spiritual marginal sering kali mendapat tantangan yang lebih berat dibandingkan kelompok keagamaan resmi. Makalah ini mengkaji dua kelompok spiritual hibrida di Indonesia kontemporer, Bhakti Nusantara dan Bionergi, yang berbasis di Yogyakarta, yang mengintegrasikan elemen tradisi spiritual Jawa (Kebatinan), Tasawuf, dan elemen-elemen dari Global Growth Movement. Meskipun bersifat sinkretik, dua kelompok ini mempunyai posisi sosial unik. Konfigurasi organisasi yang unik memberi mereka kebebasan yang lebih luas dalam mengekspresikan praktik keagamaan dan spiritual. Dibandingkan dengan gerakan-gerakan spiritual pinggiran lain yang sering mendapat kritik dan tuduhan penodaan agama, dua kelompok ini dengan status sebagai korporasi spiritual mendapat kebebasan yang lebih luas. Temuan ini menandakan kompleksitas dan dinamika tata kelola kebebasan beragama di Indonesia, bahwa ragam perlakukan kebebasan yang didapat secara sosial dan legal suatu kelompok spiritual turut ditentukan oleh bentuk organisasi dan lokasi sosialnya.]