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Kritik Terhadap Epistemologi Fikih Murtad. Sofyan A.P Kau; Zulkarnain Sulaeman
AHKAM : Jurnal Ilmu Syariah Vol 16, No 1 (2016)
Publisher : Universitas Islam Negeri Jakarta

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.15408/ajis.v16i1.2895

Abstract

This paper contains a critique to fiqh of apostasy which considers the action as a criminal offense to be sentenced to death. Reviewing the legal sources of fiqh using allegorical approach and historical evidence indicates that the action is a violation of the theological apostasy against God, and therefore only God who has a right to punish. In al-Qur’an, the type of punishment is non-physical punishment and will be executed in hereafter. The act of apostasy will be punishable by death if apostasy is in political arena and civil matter, which is followed by resistance and rebellion against legitimate political authority that interfere with public safety and official authority. Therefore, the provision of the punishment is handed over to the legitimate political institutions (ta’zir) to determine the appropriate punishment.DOI: 10.15408/ajis.v16i1.2895
Faktor Yang Berhubungan dengan Partisipasi Peserta BPJS Kesehatan dalam Kegiatan Skrining di UPT Puskesmas Rappang Rosmayanti; Pratiwi Ramlan; Zulkarnain Sulaeman; Mardhatillah
Jurnal Administrasi Politik dan Sosial Vol 7 No 1 (2026): JAPS April Sedang Berlangsung
Publisher : Fakultas Ilmu Sosial dan Ilmu Politik, Universitas Riau

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Abstract

Participation of BPJS Health participants in screening activities remains low, particularly at UPT Puskesmas Rappang, which only reached 12.7% of 21,615 participants in 2025. This low coverage indicates the presence of factors influencing community participation in early disease detection programs. This study aimed to analyze the relationship between knowledge, attitudes, and health worker support with participation in screening activities. This study used a quantitative approach with a cross-sectional design. Sampling was conducted using accidental sampling. Data were collected through questionnaires, observation, and documentation, and analyzed using chi-square tests. The results showed that attitude (p=0.01) and health worker support (p=0.01) had significant relationships with participation, while knowledge (p=0.40) was not significantly related. This indicates that knowledge alone is insufficient to drive behavior without supportive attitudes and external encouragement. In conclusion, participation is more influenced by attitudes and health worker support rather than knowledge. Therefore, behavior-based health education and strengthening the role of health workers are essential to improve community participation in screening programs.