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HABITUASI PERILAKU PRODUKTIF KAUM PEREMPUAN Marganingsih, Anna; Pelipa, Emilia Dewiwati; Suriyanti, Yulia; Relita, Dessy Triana; Marsitoh, Siti
BESIRU : Jurnal Pengabdian Masyarakat Vol. 2 No. 11 (2025): BESIRU : Jurnal Pengabdian Masyarakat, November 2025
Publisher : Lembaga Pendidikan dan Penelitian Manggala Institute

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.62335/besiru.v2i11.1917

Abstract

In the era of emancipation like today, women are often considered as a second-class group (subordinate) so they do not get equal rights with men. Women are considered to be only good in carrying out work related to household affairs. In fact, women can be strategic actors in development. Not only development in villages, but also national development that can change the lives of the Indonesian people for the better and more prosperous. It is time for women to make a real and massive contribution to the economic welfare of families and community development. For this, women need to build habituation/habits of productive behavior. Currently, there are many influences of social media that lead women to behave consumptively, namely the behavior of buying something/shopping on market place platforms, not based on needs, but based on desires. This behavior can be destructive if not controlled and changed. Productive behavior is a constructive, imaginative, creative action of an individual who can make a real and significant contribution to the environment in which he or she is located. This community service activity targets women in RT 9 Marti Guna Village, Sintang District, Sintang Regency, most of whom are housewives. The hope of this PkM activity is to create a culture of productive behavior among women in RT 9 Marti Guna Village so as to improve the economic welfare of families and communities.
From traditional livestock exchange to modern trade systems: The transformation of Dayak economic practices Pelipa, Emilia Dewiwati; Marganingsih, Anna; Bobi, Yopinus; Astikawati, Yunita
JEMBA: Jurnal Ekonomi Pembangunan, Manajemen & Bisnis, Akuntansi Vol. 5 No. 2 (2025): JEMBA : Jurnal Ekonomi Pembangunan, Manajemen dan Bisnis, Akuntansi
Publisher : Fakultas Ekonomi dan Bisnis, Universitas Palangka Raya (UPR)

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.52300/jemba.v5i2.23498

Abstract

This study explores the transformation of the Dayak Desa livestock trading system in Sintang Regency, West Kalimantan, from a traditional barter-based exchange to a modern market-oriented economy. Historically, economic life in the Dayak Desa community was embedded within cultural norms and social relations, reflecting Polanyi’s (2014) concept of the embedded economy. Barter served as the dominant system, with livestock such as pigs and chickens functioning both as food sources and social capital. The renti—a local, body-based measurement unit—was used to determine the value and size of pigs, representing an indigenous knowledge system transmitted through generations. Using a qualitative ethnographic-historical approach, the study draws upon interviews, participant observation, and documentation involving customary leaders and traders. Findings reveal that barter practices reflected social reciprocity rather than profit motives, while the gradual integration of money introduced a hybrid economic system combining traditional and market logics. The conversion of renti to metric kilograms (1 renti ≈ 15–40 kg) illustrates the community’s adaptive response to market modernization while retaining cultural integrity. The persistence of traditional valuation mechanisms signifies the resilience of indigenous economic institutions amid external economic pressures. The study concludes that the Dayak Desa trade system embodies a form of institutional layering, balancing customary governance with modern efficiency. It emphasizes the need to document, preserve, and integrate traditional measurement systems into contemporary market practices to ensure sustainable, culturally grounded economic development. By aligning indigenous economic heritage with modernization, the Dayak Desa community demonstrates that cultural continuity and economic progress can coexist harmoniously