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Performance of Sanggar Melayu FORKAMKAT Performers through Anthropolinguistic Approach Lubis, Tasnim; Br.Perangin-angin, Alemina; Moulita; Abus, Nurul Adilla Alatas; Abus , Abiyulail Alatas
Journal of Community Research and Service Vol. 9 No. 1: January 2025
Publisher : Universitas Negeri Medan

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.24114/jcrs.v9i1.68396

Abstract

Performance on Sanggar Melayu FORKAMKAT was to facilitate their organization to be formal. The community development service team from Universitas Sumatera Utara facilitate the making notarial deeds and providing website as well as skills in managing it. The method used in implementing this work were ethnography and Forum Group Discussion (FGD). Based on the problem of Sanggar Melayu FORKAMKAT, they do not yet have an official site and technology-based and official management, therefore the community empowerment service teamfacilitates the creation of notarial deeds for partners and provides a website so that partners can manage it independently. In this way, the performance pattern of behavior of studio members changes to a behavior pattern of being official and more responsible in managing the studio which is a center of activity that is not only a medium for learning and channeling talent, but can also generate income for its members.
Authority Fragmentation in the Digital Age: A ‎Social Network Analysis of Islamic Scholars and ‎Influencers' Networks in Indonesia Amalia, Izza; Makolo, Jacqueline Geofrey; Sukmana, Oman; Sulistyaningsih, Tri; Efendi, Tonny Dian; Moulita, Moulita; Remtulla, Asnath Naftali
JPI: Jurnal Pustaka Indonesia Vol. 6 No. 1 (2026): April
Publisher : Yayasan Darussalam Bengkulu

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.62159/jpi.v6i1.2054

Abstract

The rise of digital media has fundamentally reconfigured the landscape of Islamic religious authority in Indonesia, enabling a proliferating class of social media influencers to operate alongside and often in competition with traditionally trained ulama. This study maps the structural dynamics of authority networks among Islamic scholars and digital influencers on Instagram and YouTube using Social Network Analysis (SNA). Data were collected from 52 Indonesian-language Islamic accounts (minimum 100,000 followers) active in 2020–2024, coded into a relational matrix of 134 edges. Network visualization and centrality analysis were conducted in Gephi 0.10.1, applying degree centrality, betweenness centrality, closeness centrality, and bridging coefficient measures alongside Louvain modularity-based community detection. Results reveal four structurally distinct communities: Traditional Scholarship, Popular Dakwah, Progressive-Critical Islam, and Islamism/Political Islam. Traditional scholars dominate degree centrality (mean degree = 8.3) but record the lowest bridging coefficients (mean = 0.18), indicating structural insularity. Digital influencers exhibit the highest bridging coefficients (mean = 0.71), confirming their role as inter-community bridges, while Progressive-Critical Islam appears completely isolated (zero cross-community edges). These findings confirm that digital media accelerates authority fragmentation rather than unifying it, producing structurally disconnected clusters with significant implications for Islamic normative contestation and social cohesion in Indonesia. This study contributes novel insights by (1) empirically demonstrating authority fragmentation through a network-based analytical framework, (2) integrating classical sociological theories of authority with computational Social Network Analysis in the context of digital religion, and (3) revealing the structural brokerage role of digital influencers as key intermediaries in shaping contemporary Islamic discourse.