cover
Contact Name
Wignyo Adiyoso
Contact Email
wignyoa@yahoo.com
Phone
+622131928280
Journal Mail Official
journal.pusbindiklatren@bappenas.go.id
Editorial Address
Center for Planners' Development, Education, and Training (Pusbindiklatren) Bappenas Jalan Proklamasi No. 70, Menteng, Jakarta Pusat.
Location
Kota adm. jakarta pusat,
Dki jakarta
INDONESIA
The Journal of Indonesia Sustainable Development Planning (JISDeP)
ISSN : 27218309     EISSN : 27220842     DOI : https://doi.org/10.46456/jisdep.v1i2.81
The journal aimed at studying the issues of sustainable development (in terms of politics, economics, social, culture, environment, peace and justice, energy, and other strategic issues) from around the world to later be used as policy material in sustainable development planning in Indonesia, Development countries, and the world in general.
Articles 16 Documents
Search results for , issue "Vol 6 No 3 (2025): December" : 16 Documents clear
Rate of Land Use Conversion to Mining and Implications for Carbon Stocks Amelya Nur Allisa; Christia Meidiana; Fauzul Rizal Sutikno
The Journal of Indonesia Sustainable Development Planning Vol 6 No 3 (2025): December
Publisher : Pusbindiklatren Bappenas

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.46456/jisdep.v6i3.881

Abstract

Global warming, driven by escalating atmospheric carbon dioxide CO₂ concentrations, represents a critical threat to global climate stability and exacerbates extreme weather events. Indonesia, particularly East Kalimantan and its capital, Samarinda City, serves as a significant contributor to these emissions due to intensive land-use and land-cover changes (LULCC), primarily characterized by deforestation and the rapid expansion of coal mining. The primary objective of this study is to explicitly quantify the rate of land-use conversion and evaluate its direct implications for terrestrial carbon stocks in Samarinda City over a decadal period from 2014 to 2024. To achieve this, the research utilizes high-resolution Landsat 8 OLI/TIRS satellite imagery processed through Geographic Information Systems (GIS) and Google Earth Engine for temporal change detection. Carbon stocks were quantified using the ICLEI carbon calculator by integrating spatial transition data with biomass-based carbon indices. Key findings reveal a substantial decline in the city's total carbon stock, falling from 1,630,212.52 tons in 2014 to 1,442,812.07 tons in 2024. This depletion is fundamentally linked to a 65.22% expansion of mining areas. The results underscore the urgent need for integrating strategic zoning within the Regional Spatial Plan (RTRW) and adopting advanced carbon mineralization technologies to mitigate further carbon stock loss.
Applying the Theory of Planned Behavior to Understand Universiti Malaya Students’ Intent to Participate in Sustainability Initiatives Nur Ainin Sofea Mohd Huzer; Anggita Rahmi Hafsari; Zul Ilham
The Journal of Indonesia Sustainable Development Planning Vol 6 No 3 (2025): December
Publisher : Pusbindiklatren Bappenas

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.46456/jisdep.v6i3.882

Abstract

As universities increasingly implement sustainable practices, student engagement in pro-environmental behavior is crucial for establishing a lasting sustainable culture. While the Theory of Planned Behavior (TPB) is extensively utilized in environmental research, there is a gap in understanding student participation in university sustainability initiatives in Malaysia. This study aims to investigate the gap by analyzing student intention to participate, based on attitude, subjective norms, and perceived behavioral control through the Theory of Planned Behavior (TPB) framework. Data were acquired from 381 respondents via internet platforms and were then analyzed using statistical analysis. Results indicate no significant correlation between attitude and intention to participate. Nonetheless, subjective standard and perceived behavioral control substantially impacted intention. Additionally, gender and study background show a significant difference in intention. These findings indicate that the impact of society and perceived competence significantly impacts student participation, providing an opportunity for universities to focus on designing effective sustainability programs.
Biopolitics in The Implementation of AI SatuSehat as a Tool of Health Kokoh Prio Utomo; Bintoro Wardiyanto; Tuti Budirahayu
The Journal of Indonesia Sustainable Development Planning Vol 6 No 3 (2025): December
Publisher : Pusbindiklatren Bappenas

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.46456/jisdep.v6i3.888

Abstract

This study critically examines Indonesia's SatuSehat digital health platform through Michel Foucault's biopower lens, analyzing how Human-Centered AI reshapes relations of power (as state control through digital surveillance and normalization), trust (as public confidence in data security and ethical use), and justice in service distribution (as equitable access requiring inclusive design and infrastructure) in public administration. Using a qualitative case study methodology, it employs Actor-Network Theory and Critical Discourse Analysis to deconstruct official narratives, map stakeholder networks, and analyze application features as techniques of algorithmic biopower. The research reveals a stark contrast between the government's efficiency narrative and on-ground realities of infrastructure gaps, eroded public trust due to data breaches, and risks of digital exclusion. It concludes that SatuSehat functions as a political instrument extending state surveillance and normalization, necessitating robust data protection, transparency, and inclusive governance to prevent deepened social inequalities.
From Campaigns to Systems: Evaluating the Effectiveness of Indonesia’s One Village, One ECE Cep Kiki Kusumah
The Journal of Indonesia Sustainable Development Planning Vol 6 No 3 (2025): December
Publisher : Pusbindiklatren Bappenas

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.46456/jisdep.v6i3.890

Abstract

Early childhood education (ECE) is a critical foundation for human capital development. This study evaluates Indonesia’s 2022 “One Village, One ECE” campaign, which aims to expand access to early childhood education. Using pooled cross-sectional, fixed-effects, and random-effects models on district-level data (2019-2024), we assess the policy's impact on gross enrollment rates (GER) for children aged 3–6 as a part of the proxy indicator SDG 4.2 (ECE) and a key foundation for achieving SDG 8 (Decent Work and Economic Growth). Findings indicate that local campaign commitment alone does not significantly increase enrollment. Instead, enrollment gains are driven by strategic factors: infrastructure expansion, local ECE budgets, and the Family Hope Program (PKH). We conclude that political commitment must be complemented by systemic implementation to achieve universal ECE access, so that a finding reflected in Indonesia’s relevant policy shift toward 13 years of compulsory education (1 year pre-primary and 12 years primary and secondary education).
Unraveling Policy Overlaps in Indonesia’s National Development Planning System Muhammad Arsad; Irwan Noor; Firda Hidayati
The Journal of Indonesia Sustainable Development Planning Vol 6 No 3 (2025): December
Publisher : Pusbindiklatren Bappenas

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.46456/jisdep.v6i3.907

Abstract

Indonesia's development governance faces persistent structural challenges: policy overlaps that undermine coherence in planning, performance management, and budgeting. This commentary adopts a systems level perspective to examine how fragmented mandates and institutional silos collectively shape governance complexity, directly affecting development outcomes at the subnational level while drawing lessons from international reform experiences. Indonesia's development planning architecture consists of the National Development Planning System (SPPN), the Government Performance Accountability System (SAKIP), and performance-based budgeting mechanisms. While established to enhance governance quality, public administration scholarship demonstrates that proliferating policy tools and institutional actors increase policy incoherence and institutional fragmentation (Peters, 2015). Indonesia's planning and performance systems evolve within separate institutional logics, creating what Moynihan (2008) conceptualizes as decoupled performance systems where planning, performance measurement, and budgeting remain insufficiently integrated. This fragmentation is reinforced by goal ambiguity (Rainey, 2009), as SPPN prioritizes development targets while SAKIP emphasizes organizational accountability. Fragmented approaches among key government bodies weaken interministerial coordination and exacerbate policy inconsistencies (O'Leary & Bingham, 2009). with this silo mentality being particularly evident in the Ministry of Home Affairs, the Ministry for Administrative and Bureaucratic Reform, and the Ministry of Finance.
Evidence to Impact Pathways: Strengthening Policy Coherence for Sustainable Development Jonatan Lassa
The Journal of Indonesia Sustainable Development Planning Vol 6 No 3 (2025): December
Publisher : Pusbindiklatren Bappenas

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.46456/jisdep.v6i3.944

Abstract

This issue features 15 articles, including a commentary and a book review. The research papers are organized into eight thematic clusters, covering topics such as decentralisation, fiscal transfers, and governance; sustainability assessments in agri-food and health; urban tourism analytics; digital health governance and biopolitics; early childhood education systems and enrollment; land use conversion, mining, and carbon stocks; agri-economics and smallholder production and planning systems; and policy overlaps alongside commentary.

Page 2 of 2 | Total Record : 16