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Analisis Perubahan Tutupan Lahan Di DAS Limboto, Kabupaten Gorontalo, Provinsi Gorontalo. Ramadhan, Moh; Nurfaika, Nurfaika; Pratama, M. Iqbal Liayong
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Publisher : Universitas Negeri Gorontalo

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.37905/jrpi.v2i3.31780

Abstract

Land cover changes can have various negative impacts on watershed (DAS) areas, such as river sedimentation, increased flood-prone points, agricultural land erosion, and sediment accumulation in river channels. According to data from the Watershed and Protected Forest Management Agency (BPDAS-HL) Bone Bolango, the Limboto watershed has been classified as a critical land area, covering approximately 39,203 hectares. This study aims to analyze land cover changes in the Limboto watershed in the years 2015, 2019, and 2024. The method used is the Maximum Likelihood Classification (MLC) algorithm to accurately classify types of land cover. The analysis results indicate significant changes in the Limboto watershed’s land cover over the past decade. These changes include both increases and decreases in areas such as forests, rice fields, and open land, primarily driven by land use conversion activities carried out by the local community.
From Signs to Stigma: Enregisterment and Platformed Racism in TikTok Comments Ramadhan, Moh; Muziatun; Malabar, Fahria
Kajian Linguistik dan Sastra Vol. 10 No. 2 (2025)
Publisher : Universitas Muhammadiyah Surakarta

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Abstract

This article investigates how stigma around so-called “gang hand signs” is produced, circulated, andnegotiated in TikTok comments. Drawing on a case-bounded corpus of 675 comments posted under fivevideos from the account TopNotch Idiots (posted in 2023; comments captured in 2025), the analysisintegrates critical sociolinguistics and language-ideological perspectives with the concepts ofenregisterment and platformed racism. We operationalize a two-layer coding scheme: stigma processes(labeling, stereotyping, separation/status loss, discrimination) and sociolinguistic lenses (indexicals ofrisk, digital gatekeeping, platformed racism cues, moral-panic rhetoric). Findings show that gestures areenregistered as a default “danger register,” normalizing punitive discourse (“deserve to get hurt”);commenters perform outsider exclusion and moral boundary-making; and racialized/locational cuesalign with platformed racism, intensified by platform affordances and virality. We discuss implicationsfor critical media literacy and English language pedagogy in Indonesia, arguing that user-generateddiscourse not only mainstream media now participates in the production of stigma and public moralities.The study contributes to research on indexicality, platform governance, and digital vigilantism, andsuggests ethics-oriented classroom practices for interrogating harmful registers online.