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Contact Name
La Ode Agus Salim
Contact Email
sciencetech.group23@gmail.com
Phone
+6289508163057
Journal Mail Official
sciencetech.group23@gmail.com
Editorial Address
Jl. Findayani Indah, Kec. Baruga, Kel. Wundudopi, Kota Kendari, Sulawesi Tenggara
Location
Kota kendari,
Sulawesi tenggara
INDONESIA
Asian Journal of Environmental Research
Published by CV. Science Tech Group
ISSN : -     EISSN : 30474930     DOI : -
Asian Journal of Environmental Research (AJER) is an International journal with a frequency of 3 (three) times a year, published by the Science Tech Group. Manuscripts submitted must be original Research Articles and Literature Reviews that aim to contribute to and disseminate sustainable updates. Submission of manuscripts requires: the work described has never been published before; not being considered for publication in another journal; all authors approved publication. The publisher will not be legally responsible if there is a compensation claim. AJER is a multi-disciplinary journal publishing high-quality and novel information about anthropogenic issues of global relevance and applicability in a wide range of environmental disciplines, and demonstrating environmental application in the real-world context.
Articles 11 Documents
Search results for , issue "Vol. 2 No. 3 (2025): September-December" : 11 Documents clear
Interpreting Hope: A Critical Hermeneutic Study of Tourism Development Visibility, Justice, and Sustainability in North Sinjai District, Indonesia Resyah, Nur isra; Astariadi Kurniawan; Ainun; Yoshie Sukendar Anwar; Myrza Rahmanita
Asian Journal of Environmental Research Vol. 2 No. 3 (2025): September-December
Publisher : CV. Science Tech Group

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.69930/ajer.v2i3.623

Abstract

This study analyzes the May 2024 Indonesian Public Image Survey Report–LSI Denny JA in North Sinjai District, South Sulawesi, using a hermeneutic-critical approach based on Ricoeur and Habermas. The results show a complete absence of tourism (0.0%) from the narrative of community expectations, the lowest satisfaction with tourism management (63%), and the highest dissatisfaction with fishermen (44.8%). This phenomenon reflects chronic undertourism and the structural invisibility of tourism in the lifeworld of local communities. The paradox of high satisfaction (71.3%) amidst economic hardship (62.3%) provides a golden time window of 2025–2027. The study recommends a “Community First, Tourism Later” strategy with the empowerment of 1,000 fishing families, dual infrastructure, and a local-level INSTO-UNWTO pilot. North Sinjai has the potential to become a national model for transitioning from extreme undertourism to sustainable, inclusive and equitable micro-tourism.

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