cover
Contact Name
Tiara Sugih Hartati
Contact Email
tiara.hartati@kpk.go.id
Phone
+6288223612523
Journal Mail Official
jurnal.integritas@kpk.go.id
Editorial Address
Gedung Merah Putih, Komisi Pemberantasan Korupsi. Jl. Kuningan Persada Kav. 4 Jakarta
Location
Kota adm. jakarta selatan,
Dki jakarta
INDONESIA
Integritas: Jurnal Antikorupsi
ISSN : 2477118X     EISSN : 26157977     DOI : https://doi.org/10.32697/integritas
Core Subject : Social,
Terbit sejak 2015, Jurnal Antikorupsi INTEGRITAS (p-ISSN: 2477-118X; e-ISSN: 2615-7977) merupakan jurnal yang menyebarluaskan hasil penelitian atau kajian konseptual tentang korupsi dan subyek yang berelasi dengan korupsi. Jurnal Antikorupsi INTEGRITAS terbit dua nomor dalam setahun ditujukan untuk kalangan pakar, akademisi, peneliti, praktisi, penyelenggara negara, pegiat antikorupsi, dan masyarakat pada umumnya.
Articles 244 Documents
Corporate criminal liability of environmental corruption: The gap green crimes and state financial crimes Sitepu, Rida Ista; Hasnda, Nuchraha Alhuda
Integritas: Jurnal Antikorupsi Vol 11 No 2 (2025): INTEGRITAS: Jurnal Antikorupsi
Publisher : Komisi Pemberantasan Korupsi

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.32697/integritas.v11i2.1585

Abstract

Indonesia’s enforcement of anti-corruption law in the environmental sector has made notable progress, as demonstrated by the cases involving the Governor of Southeast Sulawesi and ‘tin mining’ in Bangka Belitung. These cases highlight a systemic connection between corruption and ecological harm. Corruption in this context should be viewed not only as a financial crime against the state but also as an environmental offense. This study explores a convergent prosecutorial approach inspired by countries such as Ecuador, New Zealand, and India, which recognize nature as a legal subject under the “Rights of Nature”. The research addresses a gap in previous studies that focus on corruption prevention without considering ecological justice and protecting the environment as mandated by Article 28H and Article 33(4) of the 1945 Constitution and Law No. 32 of 2009. This study study argues for recognizing nature as a legitimate victim in environmental crimes and emphasizes that criminal verdicts should focus on ensuring substantive justice. This study, employing a normative-qualitative approach, proposes integrating anti-corruption and environmental regimes to create a more ecologically responsive criminal justice system in Indonesia.
Biometrics and the ecology of corruption: A posthuman study of the E-KTP Scandal Anjarsari, Fitrilya; Sholikhah, Estiningtyas
Integritas: Jurnal Antikorupsi Vol 11 No 2 (2025): INTEGRITAS: Jurnal Antikorupsi
Publisher : Komisi Pemberantasan Korupsi

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.32697/integritas.v11i2.1586

Abstract

This article analyzes Indonesia’s e-KTP electronic ID corruption scandal as a critical test case for digital citizenship in a corruption-prone, postcolonial democracy. Drawing on a qualitative case study of court verdicts, procurement documents, official reports, and investigative journalism, it reconstructs how biometric devices, databases, procurement contracts, party networks, and legal loopholes became tightly coupled in ways that enabled large-scale fraud. Adopting a posthumanist perspective, the study understands corruption not only as the moral failure of individual officials but as an emergent effect of a sociotechnical assemblage in which human actors, code, hardware, and rules co-produce opportunities for rent-seeking. In dialogue with human-in-the-loop approaches to digital governance, the article shows that placing humans at key decision points does little to prevent abuse when those humans are embedded in predatory political and business arrangements. The analysis argues that the e-KTP case exposes the fragility of technological promises that frame biometric identification as a neutral instrument of efficiency, transparency, and security. Instead, the scandal demonstrates how digital infrastructures can be colonized by existing patronage and capital interests unless they are designed and governed with explicit attention to power, accountability, and data justice. By bringing corruption studies into conversation with critical posthumanist thought, the article offers a framework for evaluating future identity and e-government projects in Indonesia and comparable settings.
Harmonisation of criminal policy on corruption offences in the criminal justice system in Indonesia Murtadho, Nazhif Ali; Ramadhan, Muhammad Galuh Pamungkas Wahyu
Integritas: Jurnal Antikorupsi Vol 11 No 2 (2025): INTEGRITAS: Jurnal Antikorupsi
Publisher : Komisi Pemberantasan Korupsi

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.32697/integritas.v11i2.1588

Abstract

Corruption in Indonesia remains entrenched due to fragmented criminal policies that separate formal criminal sanctions from informal social controls, thereby weakening comprehensive anti-corruption efforts. This paper examines the need to harmonise Criminal Policy, rooted in UNCAC ratification and legislative reform, with Non-Penal Policy, which relies on public awareness, informal sanctions, and cultural norms. Using doctrinal legal research with statutory and comparative approaches, the study analyses national legislation, UNCAC provisions, and best practices in criminalising bribery in the private sector. The findings indicate that although UNCAC ratification through Law No. 7/2006 modernised formal sanctions and introduced non-mandatory offences, gaps persist in the regulation of corporate bribery and a lack of systematic non-criminal measures, producing policy dissonance. The study demonstrates that integrating ISO 37001 standards, non-penal asset forfeiture, public integrity education, and community engagement can bridge these gaps. The researcher concludes that an integrated criminal policy incorporating clear criminal definitions, preventive education, and robust social sanctions is essential for sustainable corruption control. Accordingly, the paper recommends legislative amendments to fully criminalise private-sector bribery, institutionalise non-penal strategies, and establish coordinated oversight mechanisms to promote a cohesive, adaptive, and equitable anti-corruption framework.  
Strengthening anti-corruption efforts for the digital native generation based on the path analysis model Pusvita, Djulya Eka; Asriyani, Arini; Dharma, Surya; Wahyudi, Didin
Integritas: Jurnal Antikorupsi Vol 11 No 2 (2025): INTEGRITAS: Jurnal Antikorupsi
Publisher : Komisi Pemberantasan Korupsi

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.32697/integritas.v11i2.1621

Abstract

The results of observations on the digital native generation indicate a problem in which students generally have limited understanding of the impacts of corruption and tend to believe that corruption only occurs at the governmental level, having no direct relevance to their personal lives. Based on this issue, it is important to explore the factors that may influence anti-corruption behavior among digital natives, particularly because variables such as digital legal literacy, character education, and teacher performance have rarely been examined comprehensively in this context. Therefore, this study aims to investigate the crucial mediating role of digital legal literacy in the relationship between character education and teacher performance in shaping anti-corruption behavior among digital native students. This research employed a quantitative approach by developing a path analysis model. The population consisted of digital native students enrolled at the senior high school level in Gowa Regency. Data were collected using a Likert-scale questionnaire, and the data analysis technique used was path analysis. The findings reveal that digital legal literacy plays a significant mediating role in the influence of character education and teacher performance on shaping anti-corruption behavior among digital native students at the senior high school level.