cover
Contact Name
Marini Purnamasari
Contact Email
marini.purnamasari@ui.ac.id
Phone
-
Journal Mail Official
mjs@ui.ac.id
Editorial Address
FISIP UI, Gedung C, Pondok Cina, Kecamatan Beji, Kota Depok, Jawa Barat 16424
Location
Kota depok,
Jawa barat
INDONESIA
Masyarakat: Jurnal Sosiologi
Published by Universitas Indonesia
ISSN : 08528489     EISSN : 24608165     DOI : https://doi.org/10.7454/MJS
Core Subject : Social,
This journal aims to facilitate academic discussion about relevant issues sociologically, especially on social transformation and an inclusive society. We welcome you to submit to our journal a research article, theoretical article, policy review, or methodological review, within the following research scope: Economy, Organization, and Society Rural Ecological Society Urban Social Development toward Inclusive Society Relation between Society and Extractive Industry Social Inclusion and Transformation, Education and Social Transformation Family and Social Transformation Sustainable Economic Management of Natural Resources and Extractive Industry Cultural Transformation and New Media
Articles 185 Documents
Sosiologi yang “Tak Takut” Kekerasan RIYANTO, GEGER
Masyarakat: Jurnal Sosiologi Vol. 22, No. 2
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Menegosiasi Otentisitas: Kancah Musik Independen Indonesia dalam Konteks Komodifikasi oleh Perusahaan Rokok Bagaskara, Adam
Masyarakat: Jurnal Sosiologi Vol. 22, No. 2
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The Intrusion of big businesses into the Indonesian independent music scene does not harm the authenticity of musicians’ working position as their creative autonomy can still be maintained. It is important to maintain creative autonomy to assure that the songs produced by independent musicians reflect the social-political nature of the society, thus representing the quality of high culture. The commodification of Indonesian independent music scene by tobacco companies is an interesting phenomenon to be explored as it contradicts the ideological scheme of independent music scenes – The Do It Yourself (DIY) attitude. The scene actors compromise in the musical scene to obtain material necessity. Hence, this phenomenon follows Hermondhalgh’s argument on Cultural Commodification. This article is written based on a qualitative research applying an in-depth interview to obtain information from Indonesia independent music actors.
Memahami Peran PendidikanTinggi terhadap Mobilitas Sosial di Indonesia Arifin, Muhammad Husni
Masyarakat: Jurnal Sosiologi Vol. 22, No. 2
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This paper explains the connection between higher education and social mobility in Indonesia. Several theoretical frameworks as proposed by Raymond Boudon’s Inequality of Educational Opportunity (IEO) and Inequality of Social Opportunity (ISO) are relevant to explain the relation between the two variables. The result shows that the connection between higher education and social mobility is influenced by social-economic inequality, geographical factors, and cultural disparities. The decrease of inequality in the society allows more individuals to achieve higher education and attain upward social mobility.
Kerentanan Pekerja Immaterial dalam Industri Komersialisasi Vlog Pratitis, Ayu Laras
Masyarakat: Jurnal Sosiologi Vol. 22, No. 2
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Recent studies on video blog (vlog) focuses on participatory culture and the relationship between the audience and vlog producer. This study will analyse the commercialization of vlog which have impacted immaterial workers in the line of production. This paper argues the the commercialization of vlog has allowed the emergence of immaterial workers, vlogger and non-vlogger groups. Both groups are involved in an unstable social relation towards the corporate. Therefore, causing different forms of susceptibility between the two groups. By using qualitative methods, various data from in-depth interviews, observation, and secondary data have shown that the unstable relation between non-vlogger and the corporate have eventually leads to a state of absence: the halting of workers protection, rising wages cost, the limiting of working hours, the demand of higher working skills, the increase of associati
Welfare Regime Transformation in Indonesia: A Citizenship Debate Yuda, Tauchid Komara
Masyarakat: Jurnal Sosiologi Vol. 23, No. 2
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This article discusses the outlook for the Indonesian welfare regime using citizenship as a framework. I argue that the transformation of the Indonesian welfare regime from productivist characteristics to universalism has been disrupted by the discourse of communitarian and market citizenship that have become dependent on the welfare configuration path in contemporary Indonesia. This circumstance has become an endogenous factor that obstructs innovation and change within an administrative body of universal social protection. Using evidence from Indonesian experiences, this article can help develop a further understanding of the complexity of relationships between welfare provision and citizenship in the context of developing countries.
The Forming of Social Capital between Corporation and Community through the Implementation of CSR Programs: Case Study of An Offshore Oil and Gas Company in North Jakarta Febrianti, Dwi Anisa
Masyarakat: Jurnal Sosiologi Vol. 23, No. 2
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Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) is a social obligation of companies established in Indonesia according to various applicable laws. However, CSR programs are applied differently between companies, depending on the company’s understanding of the CSR concept. Contrasting with previous studies which focused more on the evaluation of CSR programs and have not considered the relational impact of the CSR program implementation, this paper goes to observe the link between CSR programs and social capital. This article indicates that well implemented CSR programs establish social capital in the relations between the corporation and the local community. On the other hand, based on the stages of CSR program implementation, the company has not included the approach phase as one of the initial phases that should be executed by a company. This article also provides an overview that the implementation stages should not only stop at the evaluation stage, but should return to the initial stage of implementation, thus forming a cycle. This article was written based on a qualitative research to provide a better which was conducted in Pulau Kelapa, Kepulauan Seribu, North Jakarta, as the operational area of an offshore oil and gas company
Choosing the Playing Field: Non-Participation in the Village Level Participatory Deliberative Forums Sambodho, Johanes Prio
Masyarakat: Jurnal Sosiologi Vol. 24, No. 2
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This article will address these key questions: why do the poor villagers are not participating within these formal participatory deliberative forums? and what do they do instead in claiming accountability and gain access to services and their everyday livelihood resources? Based on 10 months of village level ethnographic study in a West Java village between 2014 to 2015, this article will focus on how these village level democratic reforms are perceived and experienced by Indonesian villagers, especially by the poor, as they interact with a plethora of village level participatory democratic institutions that are become available. This article argues that despite the proliferation of village level democratic avenues, the poor villagers still regularly rely on informal means in engaging with their elites while at the same time forgo their chances to participate through the formal avenue of participation. These informal practices stem from three key rationales: the differential capacity of the poor to engage within formal deliberative mechanism; preserving their relation with their fellow elites; and increasingly competitive elites that become increasingly accountable in providing them with better access to services.
The Morphogenesis of the Discourses of Religious Radicalism in Post-Authoritarian Indonesia Yudha, Sakti Wira
Masyarakat: Jurnal Sosiologi Vol. 24, No. 2
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The ambiguity of conception results in the explanation of the symptoms of religious radicalism at the global level becoming interpretative, depending on the contexts and meanings given by intellectuals. It becomes natural that knowledge of the conception overlaps with others, such as religious revivalism, fundamentalism, extremism, militancy, terrorism, and jihad. In line with the idea, knowledge on the discourses of religious radicalism in post-authoritarian Indonesia has been produced by institutions having the authorities and motives to make interpretations, according to the knowledge structure developed by their predecessors. These institutions, both state and civil society, construct the discourses of radicalism with descriptive explanations, to produce reproductive ideas rather than elaborative-transformative knowledge. The aforementioned opinion is true, but in practice, it is necessary to add a more comprehensive framework in explaining radicalism to anticipate its impacts. This article argues that the construction of knowledge on the discourses of radicalism must be placed within the framework of morphogenesis, where there are an elaboration and a transformation of the process of knowledge reproduction structurally, to produce a repertoire of new knowledge that is predictive. Mapping and construction of radicalism have been carried out based on products (results) as well as product makers (agencies) that form knowledge structures that can be used to mitigate as well as to provide early warning to control radicalism.
Institutional Innovation Strategies in Raising the Income of A Rice Farming Community: A Study of Duriaasi Village, Wonggeduku District, Konawe Regency, Southeast Sulawesi Arpai, La Ode
Masyarakat: Jurnal Sosiologi Vol. 24, No. 2
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This article focuses on institutional innovations in a farming community by linking the institutional approach in increasing farmers’ income. This article finds that institutional innovation is an important aspect in maintaining the sustainability of wet rice farming in Duriaasi Village. Previous studies, such as Vierimaa (2017), only made an analysis using the organizational political approach, while Michael Straub (2017) only explored the role of the mass media in political economy contestations. In contrast to both, this article uses the Fligstein and McAdam’s approach on Strategic Action Fields (SAF), which has a significant effect on analyzing the income of farming communities. Their income of farmers is influenced by the contestations in the purchasing of farmers’ crops by the bargainer (rice millers) inside and outside of the Village. In the SAF concept, the “native” bargainers hailing from Duriaasi village take place as incumbents, while the bargainers from outside the village are taking the position as challengers. This article is written based on a qualitative research, with data collected through desk research, in-depth interviews and observations from July 2017 to January 2018 in Konawe Regency, Southeast Sulawesi.
World Accumulation and Planetary Life, or, Why Capitalism Will Not Survive until the ‘Last Tree is Cut Moore, Jason W.
Masyarakat: Jurnal Sosiologi Vol. 24, No. 2
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How does capitalism work through the web of life? How can we begin to understand capitalism not simply as an economic system of markets and production and a social system of class and culture, but as a way of organising nature? This essay explores a relational, historical, and geographical answer to these questions. Arguing that capitalism is a world-ecology that joins the accumulation of capital, the pursuit of power, and the co-production of webs of life in dialectical unity, Moore offers a way to understand today’s planetary crisis. That crisis marks a turning point not only in the planet’s climate system, but in ways of organization power, production, and reproduction over the past five centuries. Planetary justice in the twenty-first century will need to make sense of catastrophic climate change not just as matter of too many greenhouse gases, but also as a moment of the climate class divide, climate patriarchy, and climate apartheid.

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