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Ekonomi Mikro Islam (Dilengkapi dengan Aplikasi pada Riset Ekonomi) Machfudz, Masyuri; Buchori, Muhamad
Book of Open Source (BOS) 2024: June
Publisher : International Research & Development for Human Beings (IRDH)

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Abstract

Buku ini dinamakan Ekonomi Mikro Islam dengan dua pendekatan, yaitu: konvensional dan Islam (Al-Qur’an dan Al-Hadits). Disamping itu, diupayakan sedapat mungkin bisa diaplikasi pada riset. Pokok bahasan dalam Ekonomi Mikro Islam ini ada 4 (empat), diantaranya Teori Konsumsi, Teori Biaya, Teori Produksi dan Organisasi Pasar. Buku ini dapat digunakan mahasiswa yang sedang menempuh mata kuliah ekonomi syariah, baik tingkat sarjana maupun pascasarjana. Tingkat pascasarjana lebih ditekankan pada aplikasi risetnya. Oleh karena itu, empat pokok bahasan di atas dapat dikembangkan sesuai dengan kebutuhan sesuai dengan perkembangan ilmu.
Development of Waqf-Based Halal Tourism in Indonesia: A Case Study of Teras Lembang, West Java Ahyani, Hisam; Firdaus, Doddy Afandi; Buchori, Muhamad; Mudzakkir, Muhammad; Muadib, Ihwanul; Bhatti, Muhammad Safdar
Mazahib Vol 24 No 2 (2025): VOLUME 24, ISSUE 2, 2025
Publisher : Fakultas Syariah UINSI Samarinda

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.21093/mj.v24i2.11221

Abstract

This study explores the development of waqf-based halal tourism as an innovative and sustainable model within Islamic economic law, using Teras Lembang in West Java as a case study. The primary issue identified is the limited exploration of how Islamic legal principles guide the productive use of waqf in halal tourism. Using a qualitative case study approach with normative juridical analysis, the study applies Ibn Qayyim al-Jawziyyah’s theory of legal change as a middle theory, supported by the concept of maslahah mursalah from al-Ghazālī and al-Shāṭibī, and Yusuf al-Qaradawi’s theory of halal. Data were collected through interviews, field observations, and literature review. Results show that the management of waqf-based halal tourism reflects sharia principles such as justice, transparency, and trustworthiness, while also contributing to local socio-economic empowerment through MSME growth, job creation, and increased community involvement. However, challenges such as regulatory fragmentation and low public literacy on waqf remain. This article concludes that aligning Islamic legal norms with tourism policies can enhance the legitimacy and sustainability of halal tourism. Policy recommendations include strengthening sharia supervisory institutions and integrating halal certification systems into tourism governance.
STRENGTHENING HALAL TOURISM GOVERNANCE IN PEKALONGAN: A Maqasid-Based Collaborative Governance Framework within Siyasah Dusturiyah Mustofa, Mustofa; Ahyani, Hisam; Irsyansyah, Irsyansyah; Ma'ruf, Attabik Hasan; Buchori, Muhamad; Muadib, Ihwanul; Supriadi, Agus; Gumel, Salisu Muhammad
Al-Risalah Vol 26 No 1 (2026): June 2026
Publisher : Fakultas Syariah UIN Sulthan Thaha Saifuddin Jambi, Indonesia

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.30631/alrisalah.v26i1.2046

Abstract

The rapid growth of halal tourism has generated increasing global attention toward governance models that integrate religious values with sustainable and accountable public policy frameworks. As Muslim-friendly tourism expands across diverse jurisdictions, regulatory implementation often faces structural, institutional, and coordination challenges. In Indonesia, the Central Java Governor Regulation No. 40 of 2023 on Muslim-Friendly Tourism seeks to regulate halal services, worship facilities, and information transparency to accommodate Muslim travelers. This study evaluates the implementation of this regulation in Pekalongan City using a juridical-empirical approach. Data were collected through 12 in-depth interviews with key stakeholders, including tourism actors, religious leaders, and government officials, complemented by field observations. The findings reveal that although the regulation formally reflects Islamic legal values, particularly maq??id al-shar?‘ah, its implementation remains suboptimal due to weak inter-agency coordination, limited public literacy, and the absence of measurable evaluation indicators. This study proposes a Maq??id-based collaborative governance model that integrates Islamic legal objectives, consumer protection principles, and cross-sectoral coordination mechanisms. The model contributes to the broader discourse on halal tourism governance by offering an analytically grounded framework for strengthening accountability, stakeholder collaboration, and policy sustainability in Muslim-friendly tourism regulation.