Gayatri Dyah Suprobowati
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Construction of Hospital by Laws in Realizing Hospital Clinical Governance Iklima Anggarani Purbaningrum; Gayatri Dyah Suprobowati
International Journal of Law, Crime and Justice Vol. 1 No. 4 (2024): December : International Journal of Law, Crime and Justice
Publisher : Asosiasi Penelitian dan Pengajar Ilmu Hukum Indonesia

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.62951/ijlcj.v1i4.206

Abstract

Every hospital is required to have an obligation to prepare and implement its internal hospital regulations or hospital by laws. The implementation of hospital by laws is regulated in detail in the Decree of the Minister of Health long before the enactment of Law Number 44 of 2009 concerning Hospitals. This study analyzes in more depth the construction of regulations on hospital by laws in Indonesia and the implementation of hospital by laws as internal regulations in Hospitals.
Is The Fate and Protection of Women as Domestic Workers are Responsibility of The State? Sasono, Satryo; Suprobowati, Gayatri Dyah; Septiano, Fatih Afrisal Bagus; Putri, Delasari Krisda
Journal of Law, Society, and Islamic Civilization Vol 13, No 2: Oktober 2025
Publisher : Universitas Sebelas Maret

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.20961/jolsic.v13i2.108522

Abstract

The issue of the protection of women and children in Indonesia is a strategic discussion considering the rampant cases of gender-based violence, domestic work as a profession that is mostly done by women and even children, and at the legal level, they must be protected by the state as mandated by the constitution to protect the entire community. The state is present as a mediator in this private sphere to protect children and women from the worst work, thus creating a socio-cultural society that cares about the slightest violence. What is needed is a legal construction that responds in terms of content, culture and structure. This paper uses a statutory approach, legal comparisons with several ASEAN countries and a conceptual approach. This research concludes that the legal vacuum for the protection of domestic workers gives the potential for wider gender violence even approaching TPPO (Trafficking in Persons), the Philippines is a good practice for the existence of the DW Bill and the establishment of a special monitoring unit for domestic workers facilitated by the state.
Legal Protection of Women as Victims of Sexual Violence in Madadan Tana Toraja Amelinda, Ristia Desmonda; Suprobowati, Gayatri Dyah
Journal of Law, Society, and Islamic Civilization Vol 13, No 1: April 2025
Publisher : Universitas Sebelas Maret

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.20961/jolsic.v13i1.94729

Abstract

This research aims to find out and analyze how women are protected as victims of sexual violence in Madandan Tana Toraja. This is on the one hand because most victims of crimes against women, besides acts of violence, are sexual acts starting from acts of harassment (sexual harassment) to acts of sexual violence in the form of rape. Violence is any unlawful act with or without the use of physical and psychological means that poses a danger to life or body or results in the deprivation of a person's freedom. The Law No. 12 of 2022 Criminal Act of Sexual Violence (UU TPKS) as a whole reflects a progressive approach to dealing with sexual violence in Indonesia and is a significant step forward in efforts to prevent and handle sexual violence. This research is legal research, which examines it from a legal perspective using a normative juridical approach because the problem studied is closely related to law in books. Normative legal research is library research, namely research conducted from secondary data. The results of this research show that efforts to protect women as victims of sexual violence in Madandan Tana Toraja include each village having different traditional councils and rules regarding sexual violence. In fact, in this community, there is the highest customary sanction "ma'rambulangi" imposed on perpetrators and victims of crimes who are deemed to have polluted the traditional values that the local community upholds. If you look closely, especially for victims, apart from the psychological burden, the family also has to pay money for the victim's care costs, transportation costs during trials that are far away and the costs of the victim's psychological recovery.