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Bridging the Gap: Tailoring Waste Management Strategies for Sustainable Outcomes in Developing Countries Mochammad, Fadhil Hayan
Golden Ratio of Mapping Idea and Literature Format Vol. 4 No. 1 (2024): July - January
Publisher : Manunggal Halim Jaya

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.52970/grmilf.v4i1.344

Abstract

This research aims to explore the effectiveness of tailored waste management strategies in developing countries, drawing lessons from both successful models in similar economies and advanced practices in developed countries. By examining case studies like Teocelo, Veracruz in Mexico, and analyzing the ambitious waste management targets of the European Union, this study proposes a hybrid approach that integrates community-based strategies, formal and informal sector collaboration, and customized regional policies. Through qualitative and quantitative analysis, this research seeks to test propositions related to the adaptation of waste management strategies, the role of community engagement, and the potential for developing countries to leapfrog to sustainable waste management practices by learning from developed nations. The goal is to identify scalable and sustainable waste management practices that can address the unique challenges faced by developing countries, while also contributing to global environmental goals. This research contributes to the literature by offering a nuanced understanding of how developing countries can navigate the complexities of waste management by adopting, adapting, and innovating practices suited to their socio-economic and environmental contexts. By bridging the gap between the advanced waste management systems of developed countries and the emerging practices in developing nations, this study aims to provide actionable insights for policymakers, environmental managers, and community leaders working towards sustainable waste management solutions.
Bridging the Gap: Tailoring Waste Management Strategies for Sustainable Outcomes in Developing Countries Mochammad, Fadhil Hayan
Golden Ratio of Mapping Idea and Literature Format Vol. 4 No. 1 (2024): July - January
Publisher : Manunggal Halim Jaya

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.52970/grmilf.v4i1.344

Abstract

This research aims to explore the effectiveness of tailored waste management strategies in developing countries, drawing lessons from both successful models in similar economies and advanced practices in developed countries. By examining case studies like Teocelo, Veracruz in Mexico, and analyzing the ambitious waste management targets of the European Union, this study proposes a hybrid approach that integrates community-based strategies, formal and informal sector collaboration, and customized regional policies. Through qualitative and quantitative analysis, this research seeks to test propositions related to the adaptation of waste management strategies, the role of community engagement, and the potential for developing countries to leapfrog to sustainable waste management practices by learning from developed nations. The goal is to identify scalable and sustainable waste management practices that can address the unique challenges faced by developing countries, while also contributing to global environmental goals. This research contributes to the literature by offering a nuanced understanding of how developing countries can navigate the complexities of waste management by adopting, adapting, and innovating practices suited to their socio-economic and environmental contexts. By bridging the gap between the advanced waste management systems of developed countries and the emerging practices in developing nations, this study aims to provide actionable insights for policymakers, environmental managers, and community leaders working towards sustainable waste management solutions.
Reformulation of Criminal Policy on Sharia Economic Crimes: Integrating Maqāsid Principle into Contemporary Islamic Criminal Law Kadir, Zul Khaidir; Zulfikar, Muhammad Reza; Muhni, Afif; Mochammad, Fadhil Hayan
CURRENT ADVANCED RESEARCH ON SHARIA FINANCE AND ECONOMIC WORLDWIDE Vol. 5 No. 1 (2025): OCTOBER
Publisher : Transpublika Publisher

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.55047/cashflow.v5i1.2119

Abstract

This article examined the reformulation of criminal policy for sharia economic crimes through the perspective of maqāṣid al-sharīʿah, with particular attention to the protection of wealth (ḥifẓ al-māl) as a foundational objective of Islamic law. The study aimed to address the persistent gap between the ethical–normative commitments of Islamic finance and the predominantly positivist criminal justice frameworks applied to economic misconduct in sharia-compliant sectors. A qualitative normative legal method was employed with a critical examination of contemporary statutory regulations. The analysis focused on how criminal liability, sanctions, and procedural mechanisms are currently constructed and the extent to which they align with maqāṣid-based objectives. The findings demonstrated that existing criminal policies tend to treat sharia economic violations as generic financial offenses, thereby failing to account for their distinctive moral, social, and distributive harms. This misalignment weakens deterrence, obscures institutional responsibility, and undermines public trust in sharia economic institutions. The study proposed a maqāṣid-oriented criminal policy framework that redefines economic offenses under the Ta‘zīr paradigm, incorporates corporate criminal liability, and integrates preventive, corrective, and restorative dimensions into enforcement mechanisms. Such a framework strengthens normative coherence between Islamic legal principles and modern criminal justice systems while enhancing the integrity and sustainability of the sharia economy.
Negotiating Customary Values: A Legal Anthropological Study of Social Conflict Resolution in Local Communities Amid Modernization Meiyani, Eliza; Mochammad, Fadhil Hayan
Golden Ratio of Mapping Idea and Literature Format Vol. 6 No. 2 (2025): February - April
Publisher : Manunggal Halim Jaya

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.52970/grmilf.v6i2.1764

Abstract

This study examines how customary values and positive law are negotiated in the resolution of social conflicts within local communities amid ongoing processes of modernization. The objective of the research is to analyze the persistence, adaptation, and interaction of customary norms and formal legal systems from a legal anthropological perspective, while identifying the implications of such interactions for legitimacy, justice outcomes, and sustainable governance. The study employs a qualitative research approach grounded in a systematic literature review of classical and contemporary scholarship in legal anthropology, socio-legal studies, and conflict resolution. Through thematic content analysis, the research synthesizes recurring patterns, conceptual arguments, and empirical findings on legal pluralism, forum choice, and hybrid dispute-resolution mechanisms. The results indicate that modernization does not displace customary law but reshapes the conditions under which it operates, leading to negotiated and hybrid forms of legality. Customary mechanisms remain socially legitimate and effective, particularly for community-based disputes, while positive law is strategically mobilized for enforceability and external recognition. The key finding of this study is that social conflict resolution in plural legal contexts is best understood as a process of negotiated legality, in which customary values and state law are continuously reinterpreted and combined. These findings contribute to theoretical debates on legal pluralism and offer insights into the design of inclusive and sustainable conflict-resolution frameworks in modernizing societies.
The Transformation of the Principle of Good Faith in Digital Agreements: A Civil Law Analysis of Consumer Protection in Electronic Contracts Mochammad, Fadhil Hayan
Golden Ratio of Law and Social Policy Review Vol. 5 No. 2 (2026): January - June
Publisher : Manunggal Halim Jaya

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.52970/grlspr.v5i2.1012

Abstract

This study examines the transformation of the principle of good faith in digital agreements within a civil law framework, focusing specifically on consumer protection in electronic contracts. The research aims to analyze how technological developments, platform-based contracting, and data-driven business models have reshaped the doctrinal meaning and operational function of good faith in contemporary digital markets. Employing a qualitative research design based on systematic literature review and doctrinal analysis, the study synthesizes recent academic scholarship, regulatory developments, and legal interpretations concerning electronic contracts, transparency obligations, unfair terms, and digital content regulation. The findings reveal that good faith has evolved from a predominantly interpretative and corrective principle into a broader governance standard encompassing transparency-based fairness, protection of reasonable consumer expectations, control of unilateral modification clauses, and accountability in algorithmic decision-making. The study further identifies a growing convergence between contract law, consumer protection law, and data protection regulation, indicating that good faith increasingly functions as a connective normative principle across digital regulatory regimes. The research concludes that sustainable digital contract governance requires reconceptualizing good faith as a structural fairness standard capable of addressing informational and technological asymmetries in electronic commerce.