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Government Communication Patterns in Controlling Street Vendors in Banda Aceh City Muhammad Syarif; Wahyu Rezeki; Zakaria; Zulfadli
Journal of Loomingulisus ja Innovatsioon Vol. 1 No. 2 (2024)
Publisher : Yayasan Adra Karima Hubbi

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Abstract

One of the reasons is that there are still street vendors (PKL) disrupting public order in the city of Banda Aceh due to the lack of maximum good communication by the Satpol PP towards street vendors. So the focus of this research is related to the communication patterns of the Banda Aceh City Government in its efforts to control street vendors , and street traders' perceptions of the Banda Aceh City Government's communication patterns in their efforts to control street vendors. This research data comes from two Satpol PP and three street vendors. Data collection by means of observation, interviews and documentation. The results of the research show that so far the communication patterns used by the Government in controlling street vendors in Banda Aceh City use vertical communication patterns and horizontal communication patterns. Meanwhile, street vendors' perceptions of the communication patterns used by the Banda Aceh City Government are classified as good or have a positive perception, because they carry out control using a persuasive approach.
PENDEKATAN KOMUNIKASI HATI SEBAGAI STRATEGI INTERVENSI PSIKOLOGIS ANAK TERDAMPAK BENCANA Wahyu Rezeki; Muhammad; Reza Muttaqin
AT-TAWASUL Vol 4 No 2 (2025): At Tawasul
Publisher : Program Studi Komunikasi dan Penyiaran Islam

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.51192/ja.v4i2.2479

Abstract

Children are among the most psychologically vulnerable populations in disaster contexts due to their limited cognitive, emotional, and social capacities. While numerous post-disaster psychological interventions have been developed, many remain technically oriented and insufficiently emphasize emotional relationships and empathic communication as the foundation of recovery. This study aims to conceptually examine heart-based communication (komunikasi hati) as a core psychological intervention strategy for children affected by disasters. Using a library research design with a qualitative descriptive approach, this study analyzes academic books, peer-reviewed journal articles, reports from international organizations, and relevant policy documents on disaster psychology, child interventions, and empathic communication. Data were analyzed through content analysis involving data reduction, thematic organization, and theoretical synthesis. The findings demonstrate that heart-based communication plays a strategic role in fostering children’s sense of safety, trust, and emotional attachment—key elements in post-traumatic recovery. This approach aligns with humanistic theory, attachment theory, and developmental psychology, which emphasize interpersonal relationships as central to psychological change and resilience. Moreover, heart-based communication functions effectively as a low-intensity psychological intervention during the early post-disaster phase, particularly in contexts with limited access to professional mental health services. The novelty of this study lies in positioning heart-based communication not merely as a supportive communication skill, but as a primary and integrative psychological intervention framework for disaster-affected children. These findings contribute to disaster psychology scholarship and offer practical implications for policy development, companion training, and child-centered intervention practices that are empathic, humanistic, and culturally responsive