Adristari, Talitha Purnama
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The Development of Cultural Ecotourism-Based Tourism: The Role of Village Governments in Managing Sustainable Tourism in Badung Regency Lukman, Juwita Pratiwi; Yudartha, I Putu Dharmanu; ktaviani, Kadek Chyntia; Dewi, Ni Putu Diah Sintya; Widiyanti, Selvia; Adristari, Talitha Purnama
Baileo: Jurnal Sosial Humaniora Vol 2 No 2 (2025): January 2025
Publisher : Universitas Pattimura

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.30598/baileofisipvol2iss2pp242-255

Abstract

This study aims to describe the role of village governments in the development of cultural ecotourism-based tourism by examining four key tourism components: attractions, supporting facilities, accessibility, and additional services. A qualitative approach was employed, using observation and in-depth interviews as data collection techniques, focusing on Abiansemal Village, Badung Regency. The findings reveal that Abiansemal Village offers main attractions such as jogging trails with natural rice field panoramas, historic traditional bathing facilities, and the Melasti Site for self-purification rituals. However, supporting facilities in the village still require development to enhance tourist comfort. Accessibility to destinations is relatively adequate, but additional services, such as the involvement of investors and community elements, need improvement to ensure tourism sustainability. This study highlights the importance of collaboration between village governments, local communities, and private sectors in managing cultural ecotourism-based tourism. As a novel contribution, this research provides insights into how village governments can play a strategic role in managing sustainable tourism at the local level. Recommendations include strengthening infrastructure, enhancing local community capacity, and implementing collaborative strategies to support the development of social sciences and humanities in the context of sustainable tourism.
Mediating Public Aspirations: Institutional Filtering, Political Representation, and the Practice of Legislative Recess in Subnational Governance Adristari, Talitha Purnama; Lukman, Juwita Pratiwi
Populis: Jurnal Ilmu Sosial dan Ilmu Politik Vol 20 No 2 (2026): May 2026 (on process)
Publisher : Universitas Pattimura

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.30598/populis.20.2.125-146

Abstract

This article examines legislative recess as a sociological mechanism that mediates public aspirations within subnational governance, challenging normative assumptions of direct political representation. While public participation is often conceptualized as a linear conduit between citizens and policymaking, this study argues that such participation is structured by institutional procedures, power relations, and administrative constraints. Focusing on legislative recess practices, the research analyzes how public aspirations are articulated, negotiated, and selectively translated into policy-relevant claims. Using a qualitative descriptive-analytical approach, the study draws on participant observation of recess activities, in-depth interviews with legislators, secretariat staff, and community representatives, and analysis of official documents, including recess reports, legislative proposals, and budgetary regulations. Thematic analysis is employed to capture the institutional dynamics shaping aspiration processing. The findings demonstrate that legislative recess operates as an arena of mediated representation rather than a direct representational channel. Public aspirations are subjected to layered institutional filtering based on jurisdictional authority, budgetary feasibility, and thematic prioritization, resulting in structural selectivity. Aspirations aligned with institutional logics are more likely to be accommodated, while others are systematically marginalized without formal exclusion. The study contributes to sociological theory by reframing legislative recess as a process of institutional mediation and introduces the concepts of mediated public aspirations and institutional filtering to explain representational inequality within democratic governance, particularly in subnational contexts of the Global South.