cover
Contact Name
DEDDY IBRAHIM RAUF
Contact Email
deddyibrahim09@gmail.com
Phone
+6285299931836
Journal Mail Official
deddyibrahim09@gmail.com
Editorial Address
Jl. Batua Raya IX Lr. 3 No. 18a
Location
Kota makassar,
Sulawesi selatan
INDONESIA
(JUMPER)
ISSN : -     EISSN : 29883784     DOI : 10.59971/jumper
Journal Management & Economics Review : JUMPER is a journal for publishing research results on business decisions, processes and activities in actual business settings. Theoretical and empirical advances in buyer behavior, finance, organizational theory and behavior, marketing, risk and insurance and international business are regularly evaluated. Published for executives, researchers and scholars, the Journal helps apply empirical research to practical situations and theoretical findings to the realities of the business world.
Articles 5 Documents
Search results for , issue "Vol. 3 No. 3 (2025): September" : 5 Documents clear
Enhancing Inter-Organizational Collaboration On Public Service Innovation In Central Sulawesi Province Halim, Rahmawati; Cante, Slamet Riadi; Tahili, Mashuri H.; Munari; Mukarramah
Journal Management & Economics Review (JUMPER) Vol. 3 No. 3 (2025): September
Publisher : Malaqbi Publisher

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.59971/jumper.v3i3.691

Abstract

Inter-organizational collaboration has been reconceptualized as a strategy to make public service innovation more effective and sustainable. Therefore, this study aims to analyze the relationship between inter-organizational collaboration and public innovation in Central Sulawesi Province in Indonesia. A quantitative method was used, and data were analyzed using descriptive statistics and Structural Equation Modeling (SEM) analysis. The results showed that inter-organizational collaboration, consisting of common aims, power, trust, membership structure, and collaborative leadership, positively contributes to public service innovation. In conclusion, inter-organizational collaboration offers benefits and is feasible for implementation to achieve a more efficient and effective innovation within public organizations.
The Role of Strategic Collaboration on the Capacity Development in Central Sulawesi Province in Indonesia Tahili, Mashuri H.; Halim, Rahmawati; Haris, Subhan; Djaelangkara, Rizali; Rafika, Ika
Journal Management & Economics Review (JUMPER) Vol. 3 No. 3 (2025): September
Publisher : Malaqbi Publisher

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.59971/jumper.v3i3.692

Abstract

A strategy collaboration approach is an appropriate system used by an organization to structure the way a team works, which is based on solid teamwork and developing capabilities which including the improvement of collaboration strategies within the organization. This study was employed to investigate the role of strategic collaboration approaches on developing the capacity development in basic education in Indonesia. The study applied the sequential mixed methods, which have a total sample of 350 respondents in Central Sulawesi Province, Indonesia. This study used quantitative analysis through questionnaires. This analysis uses Norris-Tirrell & Clay Theory, which involves four analyses such as strategic collaboration planning, collaborative leadership development, stakeholder collaboration capacity, and interorganizational collaboration. The study found that the four dimensions of strategic collaboration have influenced capacity development in basic education; there must be more challenges for the strategic collaboration to be a greater strategy for developing the capacity development, especially in basic education in Indonesia.
Entrepreneurship as Moral Practice: An Existential Phenomenological Study of Meaning, Care, and Digital Agency among Women MSME Entrepreneurs in Makassar Dipoatmodjo, Tenri Sayu Puspitaningsih
Journal Management & Economics Review (JUMPER) Vol. 3 No. 3 (2025): September
Publisher : Malaqbi Publisher

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.59971/jumper.v3i3.712

Abstract

This study explores the lived meanings of work and entrepreneurship among women-led micro, small, and medium enterprises (MSMEs) in Makassar through an existential phenomenological approach. Beyond income generation, these enterprises are moral and relational projects in which women negotiate identity, care, and purpose amid digital transformation and structural constraint. Fourteen female entrepreneurs from culinary, crafts, fashion, and digital micro-service sectors were interviewed and observed to capture first-person accounts of their entrepreneurial experiences. The analysis identified five key themes: work as moral and identity work, care-oriented agency, digital practices as meaningful mediators, resilience through ritual and narrative, and aspirational freedom within constraint. Findings reveal that entrepreneurship among these women embodies a form of moral economy grounded in dignity, familial responsibility, and community reciprocity. Digitalization emerged as both an enabler of creative expression and a new domain of vulnerability, underscoring the need for socially attuned and trust-based digital ecosystems. The study contributes to humanistic economics by framing women’s entrepreneurship as existential and relational labor, offering insights for policies and training programs that integrate financial inclusion, digital literacy, and psychosocial mentorship. Ultimately, it argues that inclusive economic development must center human meaning and moral purpose, not merely productivity metrics.
Digital Narratives of Makassar Women Entrepreneurs: Negotiating Local Values and Market Visibility in the Era of Social Commerce Riu, Isma Azis
Journal Management & Economics Review (JUMPER) Vol. 3 No. 3 (2025): September
Publisher : Malaqbi Publisher

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.59971/jumper.v3i3.714

Abstract

This qualitative study investigates how women entrepreneurs in Makassar navigate the moral economy of digital visibility by integrating siri'-the local ethic of dignity and honor—into their social commerce practices. Using a narrative-phenomenological approach, data were collected from 20 women entrepreneurs across fashion, food, and craft sectors through life-history interviews, digital ethnography, and participatory diaries. The analysis identifies five interrelated narrative themes: service visibility (framing exposure as accountability), modest aesthetics (curating self-presentation aligned with cultural modesty), family honor framing (redefining profit as collective achievement), strategic disclosure (balancing marketing needs with moral caution), and community surveillance and support (negotiating judgment and solidarity). Findings reveal that siri’ functions as a cultural compass guiding women’s digital storytelling, enabling ethically calibrated visibility that blends moral restraint with entrepreneurial aspiration. Digital platforms become arenas of moral negotiation where reputation, family pride, and market success intersect. The study contributes to a humanistic understanding of digital marketing as culturally embedded moral work rather than mere self-promotion. It calls for culturally sensitive digital literacy programs and platform designs that allow selective visibility and community-based trust-building mechanisms, affirming that sustainable digital entrepreneurship in Makassar depends as much on ethical coherence as on technical competence.  
From Cash to Code: The Cultural Meaning of Financial Literacy among Women Traders in Makassar’s Traditional Markets Amin, Andi Mustika
Journal Management & Economics Review (JUMPER) Vol. 3 No. 3 (2025): September
Publisher : Malaqbi Publisher

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.59971/jumper.v3i3.716

Abstract

This qualitative phenomenological study explores how women traders in Makassar’s traditional markets experience and reinterpret financial literacy amid the cultural transition from cash-based to digital transactions. Drawing on in-depth interviews, participant observation, and focus group discussions across three major markets, the research conceptualizes financial literacy not merely as technical knowledge but as a relational and embodied practice rooted in trust, tactility, and moral economy. Findings reveal four major themes: (1) Tangibility and Embodiment of Value, where cash serves as sensory proof of labor and integrity; (2) Hybrid Trust Architectures, in which kinship and intergenerational mediation bridge confidence in digital systems; (3) Socially Situated Learning, where collective teaching through peer exchange sustains adaptive financial practices; and (4) Moral Reframing through Digital Visibility, where transaction records acquire new ethical significance as tools of proof and accountability. The study demonstrates that financial literacy evolves through communal learning, affective relationships, and moral negotiation, rather than through formal instruction alone. It argues that policies and fintech initiatives promoting financial inclusion must integrate cultural sensitivity, strengthen social mediators, and respect tactile economies to ensure sustainable adoption. Ultimately, the transition “from cash to code” represents not only a technological shift but a redefinition of value, trust, and moral responsibility in Makassar’s local markets.  

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