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Fenomena Gaya Konsumsi Gen Z di Kota Malang Terhadap Fast Fashion Dalam Perspektif Globalisasi Budaya Nur Anisa Fadila Umar; Wafa; Lady Aqilla Balerina; Grace Octavia Ilanunu; Nur Ma'rifatul Amalia
Jurnal Riset Multidisiplin Edukasi Vol. 2 No. 12 (2025): Jurnal Riset Multidisiplin Edukasi (Edisi Desember 2025)
Publisher : PT. Hasba Edukasi Mandiri

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.71282/jurmie.v2i12.1406

Abstract

The intensification of cultural globalization through digital media has significantly transformed the ways Generation Z interprets consumption, particularly in fast fashion practices. This phenomenon extends beyond the fulfillment of basic clothing needs and has become a site for the construction of social identity and symbolic meaning within the global cultural sphere. This study aims to examine the consumption patterns of Generation Z in Malang City toward fast fashion from the perspective of cultural globalization, focusing on the factors shaping consumption behavior and the dynamics of global–local value negotiation. This research employs a descriptive qualitative approach within an interpretive paradigm through a literature study. The data consist of secondary sources obtained from academic journals, scholarly articles, and relevant books, which are analyzed using thematic analysis as developed by Braun and Clarke. The analytical process involves coding, theme development, and interpretive analysis linked to theories of symbolic consumption, cultural globalization, McDonaldization, and fast fashion. The findings indicate that Generation Z’s fast fashion consumption is predominantly symbolic, with fashion products serving as representations of identity, social legitimacy, and self-expression. Social media and influencers emerge as dominant external factors driving impulsive consumption through the mechanism of Fear of Missing Out, while internal factors such as identity exploration and hedonistic orientation further reinforce consumptive behavior. Moreover, the study reveals an ongoing negotiation between global and local values in fashion consumption practices, although sustainability awareness has not yet been fully translated into actual consumer behavior. This study concludes that the fast fashion consumption patterns of Generation Z in Malang City result from a complex interaction between global cultural influences, digital dynamics, and local social contexts.
International Health Regulations Implementation and Disease Surveillance in Indonesia: An Analysis of Law No. 17 of 2023 Bintang Corvi Diphda; Putri Alyaa Safira; ⁠⁠Fabio Philbert Theodore; Clarissa Nazwa Kurniawati; Sultan Baariq Hafizh; Fiorenza Audrey Purnomo; Nur Anisa Fadila Umar; Henny Rosalinda
Jurnal Ilmiah Multidisiplin Indonesia (JIM-ID) Vol. 5 No. 05 (2026): Jurnal Ilmiah Multidisplin Indonesia (JIM-ID), May 2026
Publisher : Sean Institute

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar

Abstract

This article examines how Law No. 17 of 2023 translates International Health Regulations (IHR) obligations into Indonesia’s disease surveillance governance. The article uses Global Health Governance and the idea of global governance as state transformation to explain how international standards become operational through domestic legal and institutional change. Methodologically, the article adopts a qualitative single-case study design and uses a structured desk review of Law No. 17 of 2023, WHO assessments, Indonesian policy documents, surveillance evaluations, and relevant academic literature. The findings show that Law No. 17 of 2023 strengthens Indonesia’s formal surveillance architecture by embedding screening and surveillance within primary health care, clarifying central and regional government responsibilities, supporting laboratory-based detection, integrating health information systems, linking surveillance with outbreak preparedness and emergency response, and recognizing multisectoral coordination for communicable disease control. However, the law’s practical effect remains constrained by decentralization, unequal subnational capacity, weak infrastructure in remote areas, fragmented data systems, limited interoperability, workforce shortages, and coordination problems across sectors and levels of government. The article implies that Law No. 17 of 2023 represents an important domestic legal translation of IHR obligations, but legal formalization alone is insufficient to ensure surveillance performance. Stronger operational consolidation is still needed so that surveillance can function consistently across Indonesia’s institutions, territories, and sectors