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Contact Name
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Contact Email
ijni@uinsgd.ac.id
Phone
+6281221901125
Journal Mail Official
ijni@uinsgd.ac.id
Editorial Address
https://journal.uinsgd.ac.id/index.php/ijni/about/editorialTeam
Location
Kota bandung,
Jawa barat
INDONESIA
International Journal of Nusantara Islam
ISSN : 2355651X     EISSN : 22525904     DOI : https://doi.org/10.15575//ijni
International Journal of Nusantara Islam is a multi-disciplinary publication, dedicated to the scholarly study of all aspects of Islam and focused on Islamic studies, receives articles from researchers who have new and progressive issues on scholarly study of all aspects of Islam related to its teachings resources, thoughts, philosophy, geography, history, law, political science, economics, education, culture, anthropology, sociology, literature, Islamic propagation, communication, psychology, science and technology, international relations, environmental and developmental issues, as well as ethical questions related to scientific research available in the Nusantara territories i.e. Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand, Brunei Darussalam, Singapore, Philippine, Timor-Leste, Myanmar, Vietnam and Laos. The journal also covers contemporary Islamic issues emerging in the Southeast Asia territories or countries. We invite and appreciate writers who write any English or Arabic scientific work in the form of both research report and significant opinion on Islamic studies and issues mentioned above. Any work published in this journal does not represent this journal editorial board’s opinion and perspective, but merely its writer findings and thought. For this reason, it is essential that the writer is fully responsible for whatever he, she or they wrote.
Articles 342 Documents
Legal Politics of Fulfilling Constitutional Rights to Education and Health for Baduy Women: Intersections of Customary Law, State Policy, and Islamic Values Ade Fartini; Eka Julaiha; Nina Chairina; Ni'matul Huda
International Journal of Nusantara Islam Vol 14 No 1 (2026): International Journal of Nusantara Islam
Publisher : UIN Sunan Gunung Djati Bandung

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.15575/ijni.v14i1.54697

Abstract

The 1999–2002 amendments to the 1945 Constitution significantly strengthened human rights protections in Indonesia, specifically regarding education and health. Despite these guarantees, indigenous women in the Baduy community face systemic barriers to accessing these constitutional rights. This research employs a juridical-empirical method to examine the legal politics of rights fulfillment in Kanekes Village. The investigation identifies that internal obstacles, rooted in the strict adherence to “Pikukuh” customary taboos, and external factors contribute to the unequal distribution of services. Furthermore, this study explores the religious dimension of Baduy identity, known as “Slam Wiwitan,” and its intersection with Islamic values prevalent in the surrounding Banten region. The results suggest that a collaborative legal politics model that integrates the “Papagahan” peer-learning concept and culturally sensitive health facilities is essential. This study concludes that fulfilling state obligations requires a synergy between national legislation, customary living law, and the religious nuances of the community to ensure rights are realized without eroding cultural identity.
Religious Soundscape and Intercultural Identity: A Study of the Sound of the Adhan, Church Bells, and Gamelan in Bandung, West Java Henrycus Napitsunargo
International Journal of Nusantara Islam Vol 14 No 1 (2026): International Journal of Nusantara Islam
Publisher : UIN Sunan Gunung Djati Bandung

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.15575/ijni.v14i1.55348

Abstract

This study analyzes how Bandung's religious soundscape—the call to prayer, church bells, and gamelan—shapes spatial identity, religious experience, and intercultural relations in a pluralistic urban environment. Religious sounds here function beyond ritual: they generate social meaning and mediate everyday interfaith interactions. Using a qualitative case study design, the researchers collected data through soundscape observations, audio documentation, and in-depth interviews with diverse city residents. The analysis employed thematic analysis grounded in a posthuman acoustic framework. The findings suggest that religious soundscapes function as shared markers of time, space, and social identity. The call to prayer serves as a collective temporal marker; church bells reinforce historical spatial identity; gamelan embodies a sense of belonging to a local culture. Together, these auditory elements create a collective acoustic environment that fosters intercultural identification in urban space. The study also reveals shifts in sonic meaning driven by technological mediation: digital amplification, recording, and circulation can diminish perceptions of sacredness, transforming some sounds into functional rather than purely sacred sounds. By situating sound as a site of encounter, this research advances contemporary religious studies and the study of everyday religiosity. Its originality lies in integrating post-human soundscape and acoustic perspectives into the study of Indonesian Islam and in centering sound as a medium of religious-cultural interaction in a pluralistic urban context.

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