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The Study of Household Waste Generation to Support Jababeka Smart Township Initiative Yunita Ismail Masjud; Felix Goenadhi; Ihsan Hadiansah
Journal of Environmental Engineering and Waste Management Vol 7, No 2 (2022)
Publisher : President University

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.33021/jenv.v7i2.3466

Abstract

Abstract. The problem of household waste faced in industrial areas is becoming increasingly urgent, considering that industrial areas are areas that are growing very rapidly. Jababeka Smart Township initiative is one of the efforts to provide services to the community, to improve sustainable living. In waste management, it takes the amount of waste generated to be managed, so that the measurement of household waste generation is the first step needed. Objectives: The objectives of this research are to know the waste generation at Jababeka residential, to know the waste generation of Mekarmukti village, and to analyze the waste generation in Jababeka area.   Method and results: The method of measuring household waste generation used follows SNI 19-3964-1994. The population used in this study were Mekarmukti villagers, both living in housing and outside housing. Purposive sampling method used in find the sample, method of data collection was observation, and descriptive statistics used for data analysis. The result found that the average waste generation from people at Jababeka residential is 0.33 kg/day/person, and out of residential is 0.37 kg/day/person. In Mekarmukti village, center of waste recycle could used to manage the household waste Based on this average waste the potential technology could implemented the solid waste management. Conclusion: The average waste generation in Jababeka residential is 0.33 kg/day/person and outside of residential is 0.37 kg/day/person, and this amount still less than the average waste produced per person per day in Indonesia.  
EMPOWERING COASTAL COMMUNITIES THROUGH COMMUNITY-BASED TOURISM: A CASE STUDY OF MUARA GEMBONG WITH A FOCUS ON PANTAI BAHAGIA, INDONESIA THROUGH THE PENTA HELIX LENS Jason Adinata Wijaya; Tony Kristhiofan; Felix Goenadhi
JEMI is managed and published by the Management Study Program, Faculty of Economics and Business, Kutai Kartanegara University. Institutional legality is reflected in the ISSN number: 1411-9560 published by LIPI in 2003 as a manifestation of the comm Vol 25 No 2 (2025)
Publisher : FAKULTAS EKONOMI DAN BISNIS UNIKARTA

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.53640/590d6097

Abstract

This study explores the potential of Muara Gembong, a coastal sub-district in Bekasi Regency, West Java, to develop sustainable tourism through a Community-Based Tourism (CBT) approach supported by the Pentahelix model. Faced with environmental degradation, tidal flooding, and declining fisheries, the region seeks alternative pathways for socio-economic resilience. Using qualitative methods such as field observations, interviews, focus group discussions, and participatory co-design sessions, this research highlights the key roles played by the local KEBAYA community, private sector partners, and academic institutions in designing tourism experiences rooted in local culture and ecology. The findings reveal significant opportunities for mangrove ecotourism, culinary heritage-based tourism, and craft-based activities like natural-dye batik making. However, persistent challenges such as poor infrastructure, weak governance, limited market access, and unequal stakeholder dynamics hinder progress. The study concludes that integrated stakeholder collaboration, policy recognition, capacity-building, and formalized community ownership structures are essential to transform Muara Gembong into a model of inclusive and sustainable rural tourism.