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All Journal Al-Ulum Intizar LAW REVIEW JURNAL IQRA´ ARISTO Abdimas Dewantara Pharmacology and Clinical Pharmacy Research Nazhruna: Jurnal Pendidikan Islam Jurnal Ilmu Hukum The Juris Jurnal Yuridis Otentik's : Jurnal Hukum Kenotariatan Selisik : Jurnal Hukum dan Bisnis Syntax Idea Jurnal Medika Hutama Enrichment : Journal of Management Science Midwifery Attractive : Innovative Education Journal Jurnal Hukum Bisnis Budapest International Research and Critics Institute-Journal (BIRCI-Journal): Humanities and Social Sciences LEGAL BRIEF Journal of Holistic and Traditional Medicine (JHTM) JOELS: Journal of Election and Leadership Jurnal Alwatzikhoebillah : Kajian Islam, Pendidikan, Ekonomi, Humaniora Jurnal Sosial dan Teknologi Devotion: Journal of Research and Community Service Jurnal Studi Islam Lintas Negara (Journal of Cross-Border Islamic Studies) Berajah Journal International Journal of Social Service and Research Cendikia : Media Jurnal Ilmiah Pendidikan Multidiciplinary Output Research for Actual and International Issue (Morfai Journal) Bulletin of Community Engagement Sibatik Journal : Jurnal Ilmiah Bidang Sosial, Ekonomi, Budaya, Teknologi, Dan Pendidikan Collegium Studiosum Journal International Journal of Social Science, Education, Communication and Economics Jurnal DIALEKTIKA : Jurnal Ilmu Sosial Journal Indonesia Law and Policy Review (JILPR) Jurnal Cakrawala Ilmiah International Journal of Health and Pharmaceutical (IJHP) Berdikari : Jurnal Pengabdian kepada Masyarakat Journal of Law, Poliitic and Humanities J-ABDIPAMAS (Jurnal Pengabdian Kepada Masyarakat) Borneo : Journal of Islamic Studies Jurnal Indonesia Sosial Sains Jurnal Pendidikan Islam Indonesia Jurnal Pengabdian Kepada Masyarakat Cross-border Eduvest - Journal of Universal Studies Innovative: Journal Of Social Science Research HUMANITIS : Jurnal Humaniora, Sosial dan Bisnis Jurnal Ekonomi dan Bisnis Jurnal Komunikasi Jurnal Pendidikan Islam Jurnal Manajemen Pendidikan Islam IIJSE Cross-Border Journal of Business Management Journal of Innovative and Creativity MARAS : Jurnal Penelitian Multidisplin Jurnal Riset Ilmiah Jurnal Intelek Dan Cendikiawan Nusantara SEIKAT: Jurnal Ilmu Sosial, Politik dan Hukum Journal of Indonesian Health Policy and Administration Presidensial: Jurnal Hukum, Administrasi Negara, Dan Kebijakan Publik Referendum Federalisme : Jurnal Kajian Hukum Dan Ilmu Komunikasi Mahkamah: Jurnal Riset Ilmu Hukum Jurnal Kajian Hukum Dan Kebijakan Publik Jurisprudensi: Jurnal Ilmu Hukum Majelis: Jurnal Hukum Indonesia IPSSJ Journal of Islamic Economic Laws Prosiding Seminar Nasional Indonesia CAPITALIS (JOURNAL OF SOCIAL SCIENCES) INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF HUMANITIES, SOCIAL SCIENCES AND BUSINESS (INJOSS) INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SOCIETY REVIEWS (INJOSER) International Journal of Teaching and Learning (INJOTEL) Jurnal Administrasi Negara Jurnal Ekonomi, Bisnis, Manajemen dan Akuntansi (JEBIMAN) INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ECONOMIC LITERATURE (INJOLE) BORJUIS (JURNAL OF ECONOMY) Jurnal Kesehatan (JK) INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF FINANCIAL ECONOMICS (IJEFE) Jurnal Salome (Multidisipliner Keilmuan) International Journal of Social and Education (INJOSEDU) JUTEQ (JURNAL TEOLOGI & TAFSIR) NETIZEN (JOURNAL OF SOCIETY AND BUSSINESS) ZAHRA (JOURNAL OF HEALTH AND MEDICAL RESEARCH) Journal of Community Dedication Indonesian Journal of Education (INJOE) Journal of Law and Nation
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THE LEGAL IMPACT OF PALM OIL PLANTATIONS ON MARGINALISED COMMUNITIES: EFFECTS ON LAND ACCESS, INVOLVEMENT IN THE ECONOMIC VALUE CHAIN, AND STRATEGIES FOR IMPROVING SOCIO-ECONOMIC WELFARE Gunawan Widjaja
INJOSEDU: International Journal of Social and Education Vol. 2 No. 9 (2025): International Journal of Social and Education (INJOSEDU)
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This study analyses the legal impact of oil palm plantations on marginalised communities in Indonesia, focusing on the effects on land access, involvement in the economic value chain, and strategies for improving socio-economic welfare. Using a qualitative legal-empirical approach, the study found that regulations such as Law No. 39/2014 on Plantations and Law No. 5/1960 on Basic Agrarian Principles failed to protect the customary rights of indigenous peoples due to the prioritisation of HGU (right to cultivate) that ignored FPIC (free, prior and informed consent), causing massive agrarian conflicts and economic marginalisation where communities only capture 10-20% of the value of the supply chain as primary labourers. The proposed reform strategies include strengthening 50:50 plasma partnerships, agroforestry diversification, women's empowerment through CSR, and market digitalisation to increase income by up to 40%, in line with Constitutional Court Decision No. 35/PUU-X/2012 and the ISPO 2030 target.
PRIMARY RESPONSIBILITIES OF THE UN SECURITY COUNCIL UNDER ARTICLES 24-25 OF THE CHARTER: A COMPREHENSIVE LITERATURE REVIEW ON THE LEGAL FORCE OF BINDING DECISIONS, MEMBER STATES' OBLIGATIONS TO COMPLY, AND THE STRATEGIC ROLE IN CONFLICT PREVENTION AND CONTEMPORARY INTERNATIONAL DISPUTE RESOLUTION Gunawan Widjaja
INJOSEDU: International Journal of Social and Education Vol. 2 No. 11 (2026): International Journal of Social and Education (INJOSEDU)
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This study analyses the primary responsibilities of the UN Security Council under Articles 24-25 of the UN Charter through a literature review examining the legal force of binding decisions under Article 25, which explicitly requires member states to accept and implement Chapter VII resolutions such as Resolution 1373 (anti-terrorism) and 1718 (North Korea). compliance obligations that include national legal adjustments and sanctions committee reporting, as well as a strategic role in conflict prevention through Article 34 investigations and Chapter VI peace recommendations, along with contemporary dispute resolution via peacekeeping and Article 41 sanctions amid the challenges of the P5 veto and representation disparities. with key findings affirming the superiority of binding norms despite limited effectiveness due to geopolitical politicisation requiring structural reform for relevance in the multipolar era
CONTEMPORARY ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH LAW PARADIGM: COMPREHENSIVE ANALYSIS OF LITERATURE REVIEW ON POLLUTION REGULATION FRAMEWORK, HAZARDOUS WASTE CONTROL, AND OCCUPATIONAL SAFETY STANDARDS IN THE HEALTH SECTOR FOR THE PREVENTION OF EPIDEMIOLOGICAL AND ECOLOGICAL RISKS Gunawan Widjaja
INJOSEDU: International Journal of Social and Education Vol. 2 No. 11 (2026): International Journal of Social and Education (INJOSEDU)
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This article presents a comprehensive analysis of the literature review on the contemporary environmental health law paradigm in Indonesia, focusing on the regulatory framework for pollution (Law No. 32/2009, Government Regulation No. 41/1999), the control of hazardous and toxic waste (Government Regulation No. 22/2021, Minister of Environment Regulation No. 6/2021), and occupational safety and health standards in the health sector (Minister of Health Regulation No. 66/2016, Ministry of Health Regulation No. 52/2018, Ministry of Manpower Regulation No. 5/2018), in order to prevent epidemiological risks such as nosocomial infections, antimicrobial resistance, and vector-borne outbreaks, as well as ecological risks in the form of water eutrophication, toxin bioaccumulation, and biodiversity degradation due to medical waste and emissions from health facilities. The normative juridical approach reveals the evolution of the paradigm from reactive anthropocentricity to proactive ecocentricity based on the polluter pays principle, the precautionary approach, and the OHS management system (ISO 45001). However, this is hampered by regional disparities, high processing costs (Rp10-15 million/tonne), as well as weak inter-agency supervision, which has resulted in only 60-70% of hospitals complying with hazardous waste quotas and 40% of workplace accidents occurring due to unsafe waste handling.ejournal. Reform recommendations include amending derivative regulations with AI-GIS monitoring, subsidising zero-waste technologies such as plasma pyrolysis, mandating a national P2K3RS committee, e-learning training, and harmonising ASEAN-PPP for synergistic dual risk prevention for a sustainable health ecosystem in line with SDGs 3, 6, 11, and 12.
ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH REGULATIONS IN INDONESIA: A SYSTEMATIC LITERATURE REVIEW OF AIR-WATER-SOIL POLLUTION CONTROL, MEDICAL AND HAZARDOUS WASTE MANAGEMENT, AND OCCUPATIONAL SAFETY IN HEALTH FACILITIES TO ACHIEVE A SUSTAINABLE ENVIRONMENT Gunawan Widjaja
INJOSEDU: International Journal of Social and Education Vol. 2 No. 11 (2026): International Journal of Social and Education (INJOSEDU)
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This article   analyses environmental health regulations in Indonesia, focusing on the regulation of air, water and soil pollution from health facilities, medical and hazardous waste management, and SMK3RS occupational safety standards to achieve a sustainable environment. The main findings reveal the normative strength of Law No. 32/2009, Government Regulation No. 22/2021, and Minister of Health Regulation No. 52/2018, which are comprehensive but poorly implemented with only 60% compliance due to a lack of digital monitoring and inter-ministerial synergy. Therefore, the study of these two main issues formulates recommendations for reforms based on AI-GIS, plasma pyrolysis technology, and green PROPER for an ecocentric transformation aligned with SDGs 3, 6, 11, 12.
CORPORATE COMPLIANCE MANAGEMENT WITH CONSUMER PROTECTION IN ELECTRONIC TRANSACTIONS: CIVIL LAW PERSPECTIVES AND ECONOMIC IMPLICATIONS Gunawan Widjaja
INJOSEDU: International Journal of Social and Education Vol. 2 No. 12 (2026): International Journal of Social and Education (INJOSEDU)
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This article analyses corporate compliance management with consumer protection in electronic transactions from two main perspectives: civil law and economic implications. Using a normative legal approach, the analysis focuses on Articles 1320, 1338, and 1365 of the Civil Code, which regulate the validity of agreements, good faith, and tort liability in the digital ecosystem, as well as the application of RegTech to prevent default and the cancellation of unfair standard clauses. From an economic standpoint, compliance has proven to be a value driver with a net national benefit of IDR 5-10 trillion for the 2025-2027 period through a cost-benefit ratio of 3-5x, a reduction in litigation costs of IDR 1.2 trillion/year, and a 40% increase in customer lifetime value, in line with the 2026 digital economy target of USD 130 billion. Recommendations include mandatory ROI compliance reporting by the OJK starting in fiscal year 2027 and Internal Dispute Resolution as the first tier of dispute resolution. This interdisciplinary synthesis provides an actionable blueprint for digital companies, regulators, and legal practitioners for a sustainable electronic transaction ecosystem.
THE LEGAL IMPLICATIONS OF PERSONAL DATA PROTECTION FOR ELECTRONIC CONTRACTS FROM THE PERSPECTIVE OF INDONESIAN CIVIL LAW Gunawan Widjaja
INJOSEDU: International Journal of Social and Education Vol. 3 No. 1 (2026): International Journal of Social and Education (INJOSEDU)
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Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.19533508

Abstract

The rapid growth of electronic transactions in Indonesia has made the protection of personal data a central issue in civil law, particularly regarding the validity and enforcement of electronic contracts. This study aims to analyse the legal implications of personal data protection on electronic contracts from the perspective of Indonesian civil law, focusing on how Law No. 27 of 2022 on Personal Data Protection (PDP Law) affects the validity requirements of contracts and the civil liabilities of the parties. The research method employed is normative legal research using a literature review approach, analysing primary legal sources such as the Civil Code, the ITE Law, and the PDP Law, as well as relevant secondary and tertiary legal materials. The research findings indicate that the PPDL has brought about a fundamental transformation in the legal framework of electronic contracts, wherein the consent of data subjects must meet the standards of informed consent—being explicit, specific, informative, and voluntary—to ensure that the element of agreement under Article 1320 of the Civil Code is materially fulfilled. Violations of personal data protection provisions may be classified as breach of contract or unlawful acts giving rise to civil liability in the form of damages, with a reversal of the burden of proof mechanism that places the data subject in a stronger position. It is concluded that the harmonisation between the Civil Code, the ITE Law, and the PDP Law has created a more comprehensive civil legal ecosystem, although the effectiveness of its enforcement still requires the strengthening of digital legal literacy and consistency in court jurisprudence.
REGULATION AND THE SOCIAL IMPACT OF P2P LENDING FINTECH: A STUDY OF CONSUMER PROTECTION IN ILLEGAL ONLINE LENDING IN INDONESIA Gunawan Widjaja
INJOSEDU: International Journal of Social and Education Vol. 3 No. 1 (2026): International Journal of Social and Education (INJOSEDU)
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Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.19533538

Abstract

The proliferation of illegal online lending (pinjol) in Indonesia has triggered a serious socio-economic and humanitarian crisis, despite the regulatory framework for fintech peer-to-peer (P2P) lending having been strengthened through Financial Services Authority (OJK) Regulation No. 40 of 2024. This article aims to examine two main dimensions: first, the effectiveness of regulations and consumer protection mechanisms within the fintech P2P lending ecosystem; second, the multidimensional social impacts caused by illegal online lending on individuals, families, and Indonesian society. This study employs a literature review (library research) using a descriptive-analytical qualitative approach. The findings indicate that whilst Indonesia’s regulatory framework is comprehensive in theory, its effectiveness is hampered by cross-border jurisdictional gaps, low levels of digital financial literacy among the public (only 38 per cent), and limited law enforcement capacity. The social impact of illegal online lending has gone beyond material losses and transformed into a humanitarian crisis encompassing severe psychological distress (68% of victims suffer from chronic depression and anxiety), the destruction of social relationships due to the practice of personal data dissemination (doxing), exponential debt cycles that cripple household economies, and even suicides that claim lives. This phenomenon also erodes social capital, deepens structural inequality, and undermines public trust in state institutions. This article recommends a holistic approach that integrates the strengthening of cross-border law enforcement cooperation, the acceleration of transformative digital financial literacy, the establishment of compensation and psychosocial rehabilitation mechanisms for victims, and structural reforms to expand access to formal financial services as a long-term preventive solution. Without such comprehensive intervention, P2P lending fintech innovations risk becoming a double-edged sword that widens social injustice and hinders Indonesia’s inclusive and sustainable digital economic transformation.
LEGAL TRANSFORMATION IN THE AGE OF ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE: A LITERATURE REVIEW ON REGULATORY, ETHICAL AND DATA PROTECTION CHALLENGES IN INDONESIA Gunawan Widjaja
INJOSEDU: International Journal of Social and Education Vol. 3 No. 2 (2026): International Journal of Social and Education (INJOSEDU)
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Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.20045708

Abstract

The exponential development of artificial intelligence (AI) has created a fundamental disruption to the national legal order, demanding regulatory transformation that is adaptive to algorithmic autonomy, ethical issues, and the protection of personal data. This article aims to analyse the legal challenges faced by Indonesia in the AI era through a literature review using a juridical-normative approach and content analysis. The research findings indicate that Indonesia faces a specific regulatory vacuum (legal vacuum) that creates legal uncertainty, particularly regarding liability for discriminatory or harmful AI decisions resulting from the lack of transparency associated with the ‘black box’ problem. Fragmented inter-institutional authority and the regulatory body’s lack of technical expertise exacerbate the situation, whilst the implementation of Law No. 27 of 2022 on Personal Data Protection (PDP Law) faces technical dilemmas regarding data minimisation, informed consent, and the right to erasure within machine learning systems. From an ethical perspective, algorithmic bias has the potential to perpetuate structural discrimination that runs counter to the values of Pancasila, whilst the absence of an obligation to label synthetic content threatens the integrity of public information. This article recommends the enactment of a dedicated AI law adopting the principle of strict liability, strengthening the capacity of the Personal Data Protection Agency, formulating operational AI ethics grounded in Pancasila, and implementing a hybrid legal approach combining hard law with soft law. This legal transformation is an absolute prerequisite for Indonesia to harness the potential of AI for Indonesia Emas 2045 without compromising human rights, social justice, and the nation’s digital sovereignty.
THE TRANSFORMATION OF HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT IN THE DIGITAL AGE: A LEGAL ANALYSIS OF THE PROTECTION OF EMPLOYEES’ PERSONAL DATA AND COMPLIANCE WITH LABOUR REGULATIONS FOLLOWING THE 2022 PERSONAL DATA PROTECTION ACT Gunawan Widjaja
INJOSEDU: International Journal of Social and Education Vol. 3 No. 2 (2026): International Journal of Social and Education (INJOSEDU)
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Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.20045717

Abstract

Digital transformation has revolutionised Human Resource Management (HRM) from an administrative function into a data-driven strategic ecosystem utilising artificial intelligence, predictive analytics, and integrated systems. However, the adoption of this technology poses serious legal challenges regarding the protection of employees’ personal data amidst the unequal power dynamics between employers and employees. This study aims to analyse digital transformation in HRM and the legal implications of Law No. 27 of 2022 on Personal Data Protection (PDP Law) for compliance with labour regulations in Indonesia. It employs a literature review (library research) using a legal-normative approach. The research findings indicate that digital transformation in HRM—encompassing AI-based recruitment, HRIS, digital monitoring, and biometrics—has enhanced efficiency whilst simultaneously creating massive privacy risks for workers. The 2022 PDP Act reshapes the labour law landscape by designating employers as Data Controllers who must adhere to the principles of purpose limitation, multi-layered data security, transparency, and structural accountability. This regulation curtails employers’ prerogatives through a proportionality test and strengthens workers’ rights to access, rectification, erasure, and data portability. Compliance with the 2022 PDP Act demands a fundamental overhaul of HR policies, investment in cybersecurity, the appointment of a Data Protection Officer (DPO), and the implementation of Privacy by Design. This study concludes that the success of digital transformation in HRM is not only measured by operational efficiency, but by the organisation’s ability to integrate technological innovation with the protection of workers’ human rights, thereby realising a fair, safe, and legally certain working ecosystem in the digital economy era.
LEGAL PROTECTION OF THE RIGHTS OF LESBIAN WOMEN IN INDONESIA: A CRITICAL ANALYSIS OF STRUCTURAL DISCRIMINATION, SOCIAL NORMS AND THE HUMAN RIGHTS FRAMEWORK Gunawan Widjaja
INJOSEDU: International Journal of Social and Education Vol. 3 No. 2 (2026): International Journal of Social and Education (INJOSEDU)
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Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.20045725

Abstract

This study aims to critically analyse legal protection for the rights of lesbian women in Indonesia, focusing on three main dimensions: structural discrimination within the legal system and public policy; the role of heteronormative social norms in producing stigma and marginalisation; and the implementation gap between national and international human rights frameworks. The study employs a qualitative research method using a literature review approach. The research findings indicate that legal protection for lesbian women is in a paradoxical state: on the one hand, the 1945 Constitution, Law No. 39 of 1999 on Human Rights, CEDAW, and the ICCPR provide a strong normative foundation for non-discrimination; on the other hand, the absence of explicit recognition of sexual orientation as a protected category in secondary legislation creates interpretative loopholes that permit systematic discrimination in the spheres of education, employment, healthcare, and the judicial system. Heteronormative social norms reproduced through the institutions of the family, religion, and the mass media reinforce this structural discrimination, producing chronic minority stress and structural invisibility for lesbian women. This study concludes that effective protection requires a holistic approach encompassing the enactment of inclusive anti-discrimination legislation, the revision of the new Criminal Code to prevent the criminalisation of consensual same-sex relationships, the institutional transformation of public bureaucracy, and public education to deconstruct heteronormative norms. Without synergy between legal reform, social transformation, and consistent political commitment, the constitutional promise of equality before the law will remain empty rhetoric for lesbian women in Indonesia.
Co-Authors Aat Ruchiat Nugraha Abadi, Songga Aurora Abd. Basir Abdul Samad Arief Abdul Wahab Syakhrani Abdur Rahman Achmad Fazrin Adi Rumanto Waruwu Adrian Bima Putra Adrian Bima Putra Advitama, Dave Affandi Affandi Agus Supriyanto Agus Supriyanto Agustinus Nugroho Jati Aisyah, Shyavara Alam Anbari Anastasia Prestika Andina Rahmayani Andreani Dewanto Andreas Harry Andreas Harry Anggia Az Zahra Anindita Widyapradnya Annas Tasya N.A Annas Tasya N.A, Annisa Rachmawati, Dsk Putu Ayu L.A, Khaerunnisa Ade P., Muhammad Fachri, Pradita Ajeng S.A Annisa Purwo Hastuti Annisa Rachmawati Ari Rahmat Elsad Arif Rahman Baihaqi Arman Harahap Asep Saepullah Aslan Aslan Aslan Aslan Aswan Athalia Christine L Ayu Miya Maryani B.M.A.S. Anaconda Bangkara Bintan R. Saragih Brian Matthew Budi Suranto Bangun Cecep Suhardiman Cecep Suhardiman Cecep Suhardiman Cesarianti, Fransiska Milenia Chairunnissa Chairunnissa Christiawan, Rio Christina Herawati G Damun, Damun Danang Rahmat Surono Dave Advitama Delia Bazlina Deny Wicaksono, Deny Dhanudibroto, Handojo Dheas Syahreza Muslim Diana ., Diana Diana Laila Ramatillah Dimas Tripraditiya Dipo Pramudito Dipo Pramudito Dsk Putu Ayu L.A Dumilah Ayuningtyas Dyah Ersita Yustanti Dyah Ersita Yustanti Dyah Ersita Yustanti Dyah Ersita Yustanti Dyah Ersita Yustanti Ekasari, Silvia Ekha Sri Sugiarti Elisabeth Purnama Massang Enna Budiman Enna Budiman Ersita Yustanti, Dyah Fachrurazi Farika Nikmah Farrel Abiyu Ramadhana Fitra Sri Rahayu Grace Riana Hadenan Towpek Hadenan Towpek Halim , Adriansyah Handojo Dhanudibroto Handojo Dhanudibroto Handojo Dhanudibroto Handojo Dhanudibroto Hansel Kalama Hardijan Rusli, Hardijan Harry, Andreas Hatta, Ignatius Bambang Sukarno Hendra . Hendrawan Hendrawan Hendriarto, Prasetyono Heri Kustanto Hernita Hernita Hernita Hotma P. Sibuea Hotmaria Hertawaty Sijabat Hotmaria Hertawaty Sijabat Hotmaria Hertawaty Sijabat Hotmaria Hertawaty Sijabat Hotmaria Hertawaty Sijabat Hotmaria Hertawaty Sijabat Hotmaria Hertawaty Sijabat Hotmaria Hertawaty Sijabat Ita Nurcholifah Iyad Abdallah Al- Shreifeen Iyad Abdallah Al-Shreifeen Jahidin Kuswanto Januar Agung Saputera Jessica Francis Gunawan Jestin Justian Juliana, Juliana Junior B. Gregorius Karunia Ilham Karim Kevin Neil McVey Khaerunnisa Ade P. Khairul Nizam bin Zainal Badri Khalimi Khalimi Khalimi Lalu Syaifudin Lidya Cristy S Loso Judijanto M Reydhi Suwanda M Ruswan Talaohu M. Hafiz Aini M. Zahari Mahmudin, Tono Mailinda, Nur Martedjo, Wagiman Martin Maurer M.Marpaung Megasari Sijabat, Fittry Mellisa Efiyanti Mellisa Efiyanti Melyana Melyana Mervyn Mervyn Michael Matthew Michelle Angelika S Mika Anabelle Miya Maryani, Ayu Moch. Isra Hajiri Mochammad Roufal Moh. Imam Ishomuddin Zuhri Mohammad Ahmad Bani Amer Monica Monica Mowafg Masuwd Muhammad Anas Ma`arif Muhammad Fachri Muhammad Ikhwan Muhammad Ikhwan Muhammad Nagieb Muhammad Naufal Arifiyanto Muhammad Rayyan Firdaus Muthia Rachman Nadila Citra Aprilia Naiborhu, Mesa Indra Ni Nyoman Ari Triantari Nini Putri Wijaya, Nini Putri Novan Dzaky Pangestu Novi Puji Lestari Novi Rizky Ramadhani Novi Rizky Ramadhani Nugroho, Sudrajat Mukti Nur Ulfa Maulida Nurwita, Nurwita Oggy Satya Tambunan Olivia Pauline Hartanti Poetranto, Soeryo Pradita Ajeng S.A Puji Hastuti Rafa Zahirah Husein Rahadian Bayu Anggoro Rahardja, Tony Rahmat Nasution Raissa Arlyn Manikam Rajes Khana Ramdan Yusuf Renaldi Immanuel Panggabean Retnaningtyas Insyira Retnaningtyas Insyira, Anggia Az Zahra, Nadila Citra Aprilia, Chairunnissa, Muhammad Rayyan Firdaus, Novan Dzaky Pangestu Reza Sutrianingtyas Rahayu Rianti Nurul Oktavia Rif'ah Rif'ah Rifa’at Hanifa Muslimah Rifa’at Hanifa Muslimah Rio Johan Putra Ririn Nurhidayanti Rizka Anindya Manjayani Rizky Yosa Adhi Prabowo Robby Sulivan, Robby Robert Iskandar Rumanto Waruwu, Adi Salmon Sihite Salsa Rizkya Samsuto, Samsuto Sanchita Bhattacharya Sanjaya, Aditya Santika Santika Sarah Ramadona Sardjana Orba Manullang Savira Lovianda Gunawan Sendi Sanjaya Sendi Sanjaya SH Septy Kusuma Septy Kusuma, Arif Rahman Baihaqi, M Ruswan Talaohu, Santika, Sarah Ramadona, Salsa Rizkya Setiawan, Lisno Shella Felicia Shohib MUSLIM Sihite, Salmon Silalahi, Yohanes B O Siti Hafifa Marlinda Putri Siti Nur Azizah Siti Rokayah Songga Aurora Abadi Songga Aurora Abadi Sri Sugiarti, Ekha Sudrajat, Maman Sukh Pawen Jit Kaur Sunnah, Sunnah Syavitri Ramadhani Sylvana, Yana Tahir, Usman Tamrin Tamrin Tanti Herawati Taufik Rahman Taupik Alpiyandi Theresia Vena Tiwi Siftiyani Rosidah Towpek, Hadenan Ummah, Iriaty Khairul Usman Tahir Viony Kresna Sumantri Vivin Caronia WAGIMAN Wagiman Wagiman Wagiman . WAHYUDI Wibowo Laksono Widodo Wibowo, Basuki Rekso Widjaja, Liza Wijaya, Hanna Wirawan, Vani Yana Sylvana Yohanes Firmansyah Yohanes Firmansyah Yohanes Firmansyah Yohanes Firmansyah Yohanes Firmansyah Yuli Supriani Yuri Anggi Yustinus Lambang Setyo Putro Yustinus Rurie Wirawan Yusuf, Ramdan Zainal Arifin