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Journal : makara human behavior studies in asia

Palestinian Solidarity Action: The Dynamics of Politicized and Religious Identity Patterns Among Student Activists Shadiqi, Muhammad Abdan; Muluk, Hamdi; Milla, Mirra Noor
Makara Human Behavior Studies in Asia Vol. 22, No. 2
Publisher : UI Scholars Hub

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This study attempted to explain the factors that lead Muslim student activists to participate in Palestinian solidarity actions by testing the Social Identity Model Collective Action model (SIMCA, van Zomeren, Postmes, & Spears, 2008). A survey of 303 student members/administrators of Islamic organizations was conducted. The sample was obtained from more than seven Islamic-based student organizations. Collective solidarity actions were comprised of peaceful actions such as demonstrations, protests, and petition signings. The model involved two identities (politicized and religious) and two mediators (group efficacy and group-based anger). Results of the Structural Equation Modeling (SEM) analysis suggest that politicized identity, as indicated by strength of participants’ affiliations with Islamic movement organizations, predicts solidarity action intention more effectively than religious identity. Other study findings demonstrated that group efficacy is a significant partial mediator of the interaction between politicized and religious identities, and collective action. Religious identity has a stronger interaction with collective action than politicized identity within the partial mediating effect of group efficacy. Meanwhile group-based anger does not influence the desire to engage in collective action either directly or as a mediator.
A Note from Handling Editor. Shadiqi, Muhammad Abdan
Makara Human Behavior Studies in Asia Vol. 24, No. 1
Publisher : UI Scholars Hub

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Editorial Note: Makara Human Behavior Studies in Asia’s Responds to Political Challenges in Scientific Publication Jaya, Edo S.; Sekarasih, Laras; Shadiqi, Muhammad Abdan; Riantoputra, Corina D. S.
Makara Human Behavior Studies in Asia Vol. 26, No. 2
Publisher : UI Scholars Hub

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Three challenges of political nature were identified in 2022: increasing number of institutions in many countries in Asia to require journal article publication for graduation of an academic degree, changes in Journal Citation Index (JCITM) policy, and a retraction case in Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology. As a response to these challenges, Makara Human Behavior Studies in Asia made several changes. First, we now publish incrementally to accommodate the requirement to publish in time. In Indonesia, as well as in many parts of Asia, publications in journals are increasingly used to satisfy administrative requirements. We have received requests for faster publication due to graduation requirements from authors from Indonesia, Malaysia, and Pakistan. The importance of journal publication is increasing in the region. Second, the everchanging scientific landscape triggers a response from Clarivate Analytics that decided to include Journal Impact Factor (JIFTM) in the subsequent publication of the Journal Citation Reports (JCRTM) in 2023.
Editorial Note: A Long-term Endeavor of Citations in the Global South Open Access Journals Sekarasih, Laras; Jaya, Edo S.; Shadiqi, Muhammad Abdan
Makara Human Behavior Studies in Asia Vol. 27, No. 1
Publisher : UI Scholars Hub

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Citations have become a “currency” of research quality. If the number of papers published is a parameter of scholars’ productivity, the number of citations received by each paper serves as an indicator of the quality of the research. The number of citations is often used to assess the quality of an article. In this bibliometric measure, papers that attract citations are considered to have a meaningful contribution. A high number of citations, especially when they come immediately after the papers are published, indicates that the paper is well accepted by scholars in the field and contributes to the advancement of science.
Delusion or Faith? Exploring Religious Delusions in Individuals with Schizophrenia within the Banjar Culture Mustafa, Nabila Regita Putri; Maisyarah, Nur’Aulia; Maulidina, Aulia; Aditya, Muhammad Reza; Shadiqi, Muhammad Abdan
Makara Human Behavior Studies in Asia Vol. 29, No. 1
Publisher : UI Scholars Hub

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Schizophrenia is often characterized by delusions and hallucinations, which often appear as manifestations of religious delusions in the Banjar cultural context. This phenomenon can be understood through the hyper-religiosity theory, which explains excessive religious behavior in individuals with schizophrenia. This qualitative case study aims to identify the forms of religious delusion in individuals with hyper-religiosity and the underlying causal factors. Data were collected through in-depth interviews and observations with 10 informants, comprising four individuals with religious delusions selected using purposive sampling based on their experience of studying Tasawwuf and experiencing religious delusions and six significant others. The findings show that delusions appear in the form of recognition as God or Prophet, receiving divine knowledge, and hyper-religiosity behavior seen in excessive worship practices, intolerance of different beliefs, and fanaticism toward religious symbols. Contributing factors include genetic predisposition, medication non-adherence, and traumatic experiences, which intensify psychological symptoms and demonstrate the complex interactions among cultural, psychological, and biological factors. These findings underscore the importance of clinical approaches that are sensitive to the cultural and religious contexts of patients and the need for further research to develop more effective intervention strategies to address religious delusions in individuals with schizophrenia in religious communities.
Editorial Note: GenAI for Academic Writing – Friend or Foe? Riantoputra, Corina D.; Wongkaren, Turro S.; Jaya, Edo S.; Sekarasih, Laras; Shadiqi, Muhammad Abdan
Makara Human Behavior Studies in Asia Vol. 30, No. 1
Publisher : UI Scholars Hub

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In an article published in Nature titled “ChatGPT listed as author in research papers” Stone-Walker (2023) shocks the academic community with the fact that GenAI tools such as ChatGPT and Gemini have gained a substantive role in the production of knowledge and academic writing. He reports that one research company has published 80 articles produced by GenAI in academic journals.  In the wake of Stone-Walker’s article, many publishers and journal editors set guidelines in relations to the role of GenAI in academic writings. All of them disagree to allow GenAI as an author.  Further, the Stanford University Artificial Intelligence Index (2022) reports that there is a fivefold increase in research and publications on fairness and transparency relating to GenAI since 2014 indicating that the ethical issue is even more pressing now. Altogether, such development demonstrates that the academic community is feeling uneasy, disturbed, and anxious on the use of GenAI in the academic endeavour. Although everyone agrees on the practical assistance GenAI provides in academic writing, GenAI also brings epistemic challenges and accompanying integrity risks (Chesterman & Chieh, 2026). As a journal concerned with human behavior and socio-cultural processes in Asia, Makara Human Behavior Studies in Asia has a particular stake in addressing this issue as we take active roles in preserving academic authority related to journal publications. It is the aim of this editorial note to discuss principles in relation to how GenAI may be used in manuscripts submitted to this journal without sacrificing academic integrity. This editorial note does not yet introduce formal rules or technical instructions. Instead, it articulates the principles that will guide subsequent editorial policies. For this editorial note, GenAI refers to the term generative AI, which are computational techniques that are capable of generating seemingly new and meaningful content such as text, images, or audio from training data. (Feuerriegel et al., 2024). This can be used to perform tasks such as pattern recognition, prediction, generation, and optimization across research workflows.
Co-Authors A, Izaak Zoelkarnain Achmad, Rendy Alfiannoor Adi Nugroho Aditya, Muhammad Reza Ahmad Helmi Nugraha Al Istiqomah, Wita Alfiannor, Muhammad Amalia, Najla Amalina, Nur Dina Arasy, Khaerullah Fadhli Hasan Ardik Lahdimawan, Ardik Awwalin, Ellya Nur Aziza, Laras Aliffya Azizah, Aulia Nur Azizah, Husna Bagus Takwin Bthari Salsabiela Rohadatul Aisy Butar Butar, Taruli Artha Corina D. S. Riantoputra Dharmadi Utama, Ricko Dwi Nur Rachmah Dwi Nur Rachmah Eko Suhartono Elvananta, Katamsi Tri Pratiwi Julia Ernawati, Gusti Esabilita, Monica Fauzie Rahman Febriyasy, Fathia Firman, Ulfiyah Nanda Fitriyana, Amalia Gampamole, Gravy Jourdan Ghina Salsabila Hamdi Muluk Handayani, Sri Harapan Parlindungan Ringoringo, Harapan Parlindungan Hariati, Rima Hemy Heryati Anward Herawati , Herawati Hermawan, Dody Hikmat, Ramadhan Maulana Husaini Husaini imadduddin, Imadduddin Istiqamah, Ermina Istiqamah Istiqomah Iwan Aflanie Izaak Zoelkarnain Akbar, Izaak Zoelkarnain I’anah, Noor Jaya, Edo S. Khaerullah Fadhli Arasy Hasan Lia Nur Hafisah Maisyarah, Nur’Aulia Marina Dwi Mayangsari Marpaung, Adelia Septianingrum Mashuda, Mashuda Maulidina, Aulia Meitria Syahadatina Noor Meydisa Utami Tanau Mirra Noor Milla Mohammad Bakhriansyah Mohammad Isa Muhamad Muslim Musafaah Musafaah Mustafa, Nabila Regita Putri Neka Erlyani Neka Erlyani Nelly Al Audhah Nia Kania Noor I’anah Pratama, Muhammad Yusril Putri, Nabila Wulandari Ananda Putri, Zerlinda Rezkika Lestari Rahayu, Devy Sry Rahmiyati Rias Rana Salsabila Rima Hariati Roselina Panghiyangani Rosihan Adhani, Rosihan Rusdi Rusli Rusdi Rusli, Rusdi Safitri, Nadiya Nur Salbiyah, Siti Salma, Nur Zahidatus Salsabila, Aqiella Farida Sari, Ni Putu Sri Wulan Sekarasih, Laras Sembiring, Thyrister Nina Asarya Silvia Kristanti Tri Febriana Silvia Kristanti Tri Febriana Sukma Noor Akbar Sulastri, Norjainah Syamsul Arifin Syamsul Arifin Taupik Rahman Trihapsari, Tunjung Ulum, Wildan Rusdaul Vironika, Trisia Widiastuti, Komang Wita Al Istiqomah Wongkaren, Turro S. WULANDARI, APRILIA Wury Utami Febriani Yoziana, Myra Zairin Noor Zidan, Rifki