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Building The Entepreneural Spirit of Local Community to Manage Lake Limboto as Sustainable Public Asset Trisusanti Lamangida; Apris Ara Tilome; Joice Machmud
Muhammadiyah International Journal of Economics and Business Vol. 2, No.2, 2019
Publisher : Asosiasi Fakultas Ekonomi dan Bisnis Perguruan Tinggi Muhammadiyah

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Abstract

Lake Limboto is a vital public asset that concerns the lives of many people hence it is important for the government to pay serious attention and proper management on it. Furthermore, three parties are closely linked to the sustainability of this public asset. Building the entrepreneurial spirit of the local community to manage Lake Limboto should be addressed to be the inspiration and new spirit of the entrepreneurial community as a sustainable investment. This study aims to analyzeand explain the importance of building the community entrepreneurial spirit on the management of Lake Limboto as a sustainable investment, particularly in the economic empowerment of local community. Data were collected using FGD technique, literature studies, and field observation. The analysis was conducted using qualitative descriptive approach. This study revealed the development of community business groups or creative-innovative behavior of consumers in managing Lake Limboto. In the implementation, innovation becomes more valuable in building creativity and innovation, particularly in building the entrepreneurial spirit in managing Lake Limboto as a public and regional asset in the present and the future. The theoretical implication is to reaffirm Schumpeter’s theory of innovation. In association with the economic empowerment and development of community, entrepreneurship is aspired to realize human resources who arereliable, professional, highly motivated with the need of achievement, risk takers, innovative and independence. It entails the abilities to create new products and services in the market, new place of business transaction, new buyers, new market leader, and to support economic development.
THE NEGATIVE IMPACT OF SOCIAL-POLITICAL ELITE TRANSACTIONS ON LOCAL DEMOCRACY IN GORONTALO Apris Ara Tilome
Multidiciplinary Output Research For Actual and International Issue (MORFAI) Vol. 5 No. 4 (2025): Multidiciplinary Output Research For Actual and International Issue
Publisher : RADJA PUBLIKA

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.54443/morfai.v5i4.3115

Abstract

Democracy, as an ideal political system, is expected to ensure active public participation in the process of public decision-making. However, in the Indonesian context, the quality of local democracy is often distorted by transactional practices and the pragmatism of political elites. This phenomenon threatens the integrity of democracy, diminishes the quality of public participation, reinforces societal dependence on elites, and weakens democratic institutions. In Gorontalo, the practice of social transactions between political elites and the public has intensified, particularly during local elections and legislative campaigns. The case of the 2024 repeat voting (PSU) in the North Gorontalo Regency serves as a clear indication of the dominance of capital power and elite networks over candidates’ visions and missions. This study aims to analyze the negative impact of social-political elite transactions on local democracy and to formulate policy recommendations for strengthening a healthy, participatory, and integrity-based democratic system. The research adopts a quantitative approach using a survey design. The study population includes the general public, political elites, party officials, and election management and supervisory bodies (KPU, Bawaslu, and DKPP) across three regencies in Gorontalo Province. The findings reveal that transactional political practices are a defining feature of every electoral moment in the region, especially in the lead-up to regional and legislative elections. These transactions include money politics, short-term social assistance, and project promises in exchange for electoral support. This highlights how political contestation is largely determined by financial capital rather than candidate vision or integrity. Spearman correlation tests indicate a significant negative relationship between the intensity of social-political transactions and the quality of healthy political participation (r = -0.642; p < 0.01). The higher the transaction intensity, the lower the quality of participation and public trust in local democracy. These findings strengthen the hypothesis that local democracy in Gorontalo is regressing due to transactional politics. Without knowledge-based and policy-oriented interventions, the negative consequences are likely to persist, including the erosion of local government legitimacy, declining public trust in electoral institutions, and the loss of the substantive meaning of political participation as a form of public control over power.