Journal of Governance Risk Management Compliance and Sustainability
The focus and scope of JRGCS are but not limited to Principles and theory of risk assessment and management, Risk assessment policy, standards and regulations, Risk-based decision making and risk management, decision making and decision support systems for risk and disaster management on regional and global scales, Risk perception and communications, Risk assessment and control, Risk characterisation, Dynamic risk assessment, Integration of risk models and quantifications, Advanced concepts and information technologies in risk assessment and management, Integrated, risk assessment and safety management, Integrated risk assessment in developing and rapidly developing countries, Socio-economic, scientific and integrated approaches to sustainable development which consist of covering some issues/topic on: Development and realization of national policies and international treaties for sustainable development, Implementation and monitoring of policies for sustainable development, Changing consumption and production patterns, Developments in cultural diversity, tradition, social systems, globalization, immigration and settlement, and their impact on cultural or social sustainability, Ethical and philosophical aspects of sustainable development Education and awareness of sustainability, Impact of safety, security and disaster management on sustainability, Health-related aspects of sustainability, System analysis methods, including life cycle assessment and management, Sustainable Chemistry, Sustainable utilization of resources such as land, water, atmosphere and other biological resources, New and renewable sources of energy, Sustainable energy preservation and regeneration methods, Quasi-environmental sustainability – short term measures and their long term effects, Effects of global climate change on development and sustainability.
Articles
72 Documents
Moderating Role Of Inflation In Macroprudential Policy And Banking Risk: Indonesian Sharia Banks
Fariska, Putri;
Rohandi, Mochamad Malik Akbar
Journal of Governance Risk Management Compliance and Sustainability Vol. 6 No. 1 (2026): April Volume
Publisher : Center for Risk Management & Sustainability and RSF Press
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DOI: 10.31098/jgrcs.v6i1.3961
This paper investigates the moderation effect of macroeconomic policy on the effectiveness of macroprudential and risk management in sharia bank. Macroprudential policies are increasingly being used, developing countries use them the most, especially those related to foreign exchange, but several studies state that this policy will help the country's level of financial stability which will ultimately improve the economy. Apart from that, several countries have revealed that macroprudential policy will be more effectively implemented when the government implements tight monetary policy. We took data from 2010-2024 we try to examine the effect macroprudential to risk management when the government implements tight monetary policy using Moderation Regression Analysis to capture conditional effect and conditional interaction. From this research, we can conclude that hat the implementation of macroprudential policy in sharia banking has a significant influence on risk management through managing financing risk and liquidity risk, while the magnitude of the influence of implementing macroprudential policy on risk management will depend on macroeconomic policy, namely the inflation rate, but only affects liquidity risk management and does not affect financing risk management. Directly, the inflation rate also has an influence on liquidity risk in Islamic banking. In other words, the intermediation function of sharia banking can run optimally due to the effectiveness of implementing macroprudential policies, so that banks are able to carry out their functions well.
Strengthening Academic Libraries: Quality Assurance Planning and Development Office’s Role in Digital Resilience and Risk Management
Montano, Mary Rose;
Gonzales, Ronald A;
Alba, Simplicio P;
Opeña, Anna Rhea C;
Garma, Marilyn R;
Salenga Jr, Armando A;
Malitig, Francis Eduard T;
Rodelas, Lyka B;
Navarro, Michael S
Journal of Governance Risk Management Compliance and Sustainability Vol. 6 No. 1 (2026): April Volume
Publisher : Center for Risk Management & Sustainability and RSF Press
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DOI: 10.31098/jgrcs.v6i1.4119
Libraries increasingly face complex risks threatening both physical and digital collections; however, empirical qualitative evidence on how institutional risk governance structures operationalize digital resilience remains limited. This qualitative case study examines the risk preparedness of 20 academic libraries within a bounded higher education governance context through open-ended questionnaires and policy document review. Findings indicate that while basic physical safeguards and manual digital backups are widely practiced, libraries lack formalized disaster recovery frameworks, cybersecurity protocols, and governance-aligned digital risk strategies. Crucially, the Quality Assurance, Planning, and Development Office (QAPDO) emerges not merely as a support unit but as a governance leverage point, capable of translating risk awareness into institutional obligation through policy alignment, strategic planning, accreditation-linked monitoring, capacity building, and resource mobilization. The study advances institutional resilience scholarship by reframing digital resilience from a technical or library-specific concern into an institutional governance capacity, demonstrating how QAPDO can re-couple fragmented library practices with central quality assurance systems. The study proposes a governance-centered conceptual framework that positions QAPDO as the mediating mechanism between institutional risk environments and sustainable digital resilience outcomes, offering a replicable model for embedding resilience into higher education library governance.