cover
Contact Name
Gita Susanti
Contact Email
editor@pppii.org
Phone
+6281327987309
Journal Mail Official
editor@pppii.org
Editorial Address
Jl. Griya Abdul Kadir No.H 7, RT.001/RW.01, Balang Baru, Kec. Tamalate, Kota Makassar, Sulawesi Selatan 90224
Location
Unknown,
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INDONESIA
Adaptive Governance Research
ISSN : -     EISSN : 30630878     DOI : https://doi.org/10.71435
Core Subject : Science, Social,
Adaptive Governance Research is a contemporary approach to decision-making that acknowledges the inherent complexity and uncertainty of social, environmental, and socio-ecological systems. It emphasizes the need for flexible, collaborative, and learning-oriented processes to effectively address evolving challenges and achieve sustainable outcomes. The scope of this journal includes research related to policy, management, analysis and decisions related to Adaptive Governance.
Articles 20 Documents
Analysis of the Effectiveness of Adaptive Governance in Managing Natural Resource Conflicts (The Case of Mining in the Sorowako Region) Wirawan, Dahlia
Adaptive Governance Research Vol. 1 No. 1 (2024): Adaptive Governance Research
Publisher : Pemuda Peduli Publikasi Insan Ilmiah

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.71435/639058

Abstract

Purpose: This examine investigates the dynamics of adaptive governance in dealing with herbal useful resource conflicts, focusing at the Sorowako vicinity's mining sports activities. Subjects and Methods: Through a mixed-techniques method, which includes descriptive information, paired-samples t-checks, regression analyses, ANCOVA, and Pearson correlational analyses, the research explores stakeholder pleasure and governance effectiveness. Results: Findings display screen the pivotal roles of community participation, institutional collaboration, and stakeholder engagement in enhancing adaptive governance mechanisms. Significant close by variations in stakeholder delight underscore the need for context-precise processes. Conclusions: The test contributes insights to useful aid management and emphasizes the significance of inclusive decision-making strategies.
Adaptive Governance Strategy for Forest Conservation in Sumatra in Balancing Environmental Needs and Community Involvement Julia, Indira Ratu
Adaptive Governance Research Vol. 1 No. 1 (2024): Adaptive Governance Research
Publisher : Pemuda Peduli Publikasi Insan Ilmiah

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.71435/639059

Abstract

Purpose: This study investigates the efficacy of adaptive governance strategies for forest conservation in Sumatra, that specialize in Lubuk Beringin village. Subjects and Methods:  Through a combined-techniques technique, such as surveys and interviews, stakeholders' perceptions and studies have been analyzed. Results: Results reveal that network participation and institutional preparations considerably have an impact on stakeholders' perceptions of forest conservation. Conclusions: The findings emphasize the importance of bendy governance frameworks in fostering collaboration and resilience. Moving forward, promoting neighborhood empowerment and multi-stakeholder partnerships is crucial for sustainable forest management.
Adaptive Governance Frameworks for Disaster Risk Reduction in Coastal Ternate Kyren, Kyren
Adaptive Governance Research Vol. 1 No. 1 (2024): Adaptive Governance Research
Publisher : Pemuda Peduli Publikasi Insan Ilmiah

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.71435/639060

Abstract

Purpose: This take a look at examines the position of adaptive governance frameworks in catastrophe chance reduction efforts in coastal Ternate and the village of Pangkalan Jati in Sumatra, Indonesia. Subjects and Methods: Through a combined-methods technique integrating qualitative interviews and quantitative surveys, the study explores the effectiveness of governance systems and their effect on network resilience. Descriptive records reveal demographic characteristics, perceptions of governance effectiveness, and stages of catastrophe preparedness among individuals. Inferential analyses, which includes paired-samples t-checks, regression analyses, ANCOVA, and Pearson correlational analyses, elucidate the relationships between governance effectiveness, socio-economic elements, and disaster preparedness rankings. Results: The findings underscore the significance of transparency, network engagement, adaptability, income, and education level in selling catastrophe resilience. Conclusions: Ultimately, implementing adaptive governance frameworks that foster collaboration and inclusivity is essential for mitigating catastrophe risks and building sustainable groups in coastal regions.
Adaptive Governance Strategy to Reduce Flood Risk in the Ganges River, North India Banhi, Khant
Adaptive Governance Research Vol. 1 No. 1 (2024): Adaptive Governance Research
Publisher : Pemuda Peduli Publikasi Insan Ilmiah

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.71435/639061

Abstract

Purpose: This take a look at examines the dynamics of flood chance perception, adaptive governance effectiveness, and community resilience along the Ganges River in North India, focusing on the village of Kalapathar. Subjects and Methods: Through regression, ANCOVA, and correlational analyses, the studies explore the relationships between these key variables and their implications for flood resilience strategies. Results: Findings highlight the great impact of flood chance notion on community resilience and the high-quality correlation among adaptive governance effectiveness and resilience. Conclusions: The take a look at underscores the significance of addressing perceptions of chance, enhancing governance mechanisms, and fostering community resilience to mitigate flood affects in prone regions.
Adaptive Management of Clean Water: Strengthening Environmental Governance in Dhaka, Bangladesh Kapoor, Preeti
Adaptive Governance Research Vol. 1 No. 1 (2024): Adaptive Governance Research
Publisher : Pemuda Peduli Publikasi Insan Ilmiah

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.71435/639062

Abstract

Purpose: This study investigates the dynamics of adaptive control in smooth water provision in Dhaka, Bangladesh, focusing on water exceptional pleasure, governance effectiveness perceptions, and water trying out frequency. Subjects and Methods: Utilizing a blended-methods technique, inclusive of regression, correlation analyses, and ANCOVA, the studies shed light on the elaborate interplay amongst these variables. Results: Results imply a widespread improvement in water great satisfaction following an intervention geared toward enhancing governance effectiveness. Regression analysis highlights the pivotal roles of governance perceptions and water testing frequency in influencing water best pleasure. Correlation analyses unveil the interconnectedness of those variables, emphasizing the need for holistic water control strategies. Conclusions: The examine underscores the significance of adaptive governance frameworks to address complicated water control challenges and advocates for network-centric methods in Dhaka's water provision structures.
Adaptive Strategies for Coastal Resource Management in the Era of Climate Change: Literature Review Ardiyanti, Ardiyanti; Kahfi, Fahrul; Rusli, Rusli
Adaptive Governance Research Vol. 2 No. 1 (2025): Adaptive Governance Research
Publisher : Pemuda Peduli Publikasi Insan Ilmiah

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.71435/639063

Abstract

Purpose: The study aims to clarify the responsive steps taken in the management of coastal resources in order to address the growing climate stresses. It seeks to identify and categorize adaptation approaches, and to evaluate their effectiveness in promoting sustainable and resilient governance. Subjects and Methods: The research is a systematic literature review based on 84 peer-reviewed journal articles and authoritative grey literature published between 2000–2025. The analysis focused on identifying patterns, typologies, and governance frameworks employed in coastal resource management. Results: The review identified a typology consisting of four main areas of response: (1) Institutional and policy-based modes; (2) Community-based adaptation; (3) Ecosystem-based frameworks; (4) Technology-infrastructure responses. Findings reveal increasing complexity in coastal governance under conditions of epistemic uncertainty, with innovation occurring alongside institutional inertia. Decentralized governance has gained prominence but remains limited by regulatory constraints, jurisdictional fragmentation, and short-term focus. Ecosystem-based interventions offer long-term benefits but face challenges in policy integration and implementation. Technological and infrastructure responses help manage immediate risks but often neglect equity and long-term resilience. Conclusions: The study highlights the need for systems-based, iterative-learning, and cross-scalar interaction frameworks in adaptive governance. It suggests that future management should move beyond short-term fixes and adopt proactive, inclusive, and resilient approaches. The findings offer both theoretical and empirical opportunities for policy change, capacity building, and improved resource planning to confront escalating climate impacts.
Sustainable Environmental Policy: Harmonization between National Law and Local Wisdom in Makassar City Khaerunnisa, Andi Diza; Alam, Fitriani Syamsu
Adaptive Governance Research Vol. 2 No. 1 (2025): Adaptive Governance Research
Publisher : Pemuda Peduli Publikasi Insan Ilmiah

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.71435/639064

Abstract

Purpose: The study examines the correlation between national environmental policy and local common sense with respect to sustainable environmental management in the city of Makassar, Indonesia. It emphasizes the intersections between official law, customary knowledge systems, and natural understandings at the local level. Subjects and Methods: The research employs a qualitative approach, drawing on interviews, on-site observations, and document analyses to capture both regulatory perspectives and community-based practices. Results: The findings indicate that although national regulation provides the structural framework and legal authority required to address environmental management, its interpretation frequently conflicts with the socio-cultural practices of local populations. These tensions stem from the rigid prescriptions of formal regulations and institutional blind spots that fail to recognize the legitimacy of indigenous environmental norms. Makassar’s local wisdom expressed through community laws, collective rituals, and ecological taboos remains vital in shaping communal environmental action but is often marginalized and insufficiently incorporated into policymaking. Conclusions: The study argues that sustainable environmental governance should move beyond compliance-based regulation toward culturally sensitive policy development and coordinated implementation across multiple institutional levels. Successful harmonization of national law and local wisdom requires adaptive governance, trans-sectoral consultation, and legal pluralism. By situating environmental policy within management studies, the research proposes a conceptual framework of co-managed governance that balances top-down controls with bottom-up knowledge, offering practical strategies for inclusive and sustainable outcomes.
Local Wisdom as a Pillar of Sustainable Environmental Policy: An Environmental Governance Perspective Yusuf, Muhammad; Rafli, Muhammad; Hidayat, Rahmat Nur
Adaptive Governance Research Vol. 2 No. 1 (2025): Adaptive Governance Research
Publisher : Pemuda Peduli Publikasi Insan Ilmiah

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.71435/639065

Abstract

Purpose: This paper examines local wisdom as a fundamental component in the thinking and implementation of sustainable environmental policy under the broader process of environmental governance. It critiques the dominance of purely technological and top-down approaches, and instead advances hybrid, participatory, and culture-sensitive models. Subjects and Methods: The study adopts a quantitative correlational research design to examine the statistical relationship between community observation of traditional ecological practices and outlooks on environmental management in selected destinations in Indonesia. A total of 375 respondents were engaged across culturally diverse regions of Bali, South Sulawesi, and West Nusa Tenggara. Using structured Likert-scale questionnaires, the survey measured three central dimensions of local wisdom: ritual practices, intergenerational knowledge transfer, and customary penalties, along with their relationship to governance outcomes. Results: The results indicate that there is a close and positive correlation between the strength of local wisdom and the effectiveness of environmental governance. Multiple regression analysis further demonstrates that these three elements of local wisdom maintain a statistically significant relationship with governance performance, explaining 53.6% of the observed variance. These findings confirm that conventional environmental behaviors, embedded in culture and tradition, are dynamic and community-based modes of governance that enhance compliance, legitimacy, and conservation effectiveness. Conclusions: The study contributes to management and public policy literature by providing empirical evidence on the integration of local knowledge systems into formal governance frameworks. By reframing communities as co-governors rather than passive beneficiaries, the paper highlights the strategic importance of local wisdom as a sustainability resource that strengthens policy innovation, institutional performance, and long-term ecological resilience.
Evaluation of Environmental Regulations in Reducing Natural Resource Degradation in Protected Forest Areas in South Sulawesi Fajri, Fajri; Riyadi, Agus; Ananta, Sabri
Adaptive Governance Research Vol. 2 No. 1 (2025): Adaptive Governance Research
Publisher : Pemuda Peduli Publikasi Insan Ilmiah

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.71435/639066

Abstract

Purpose: This research evaluates the ability of environmental regulations to prevent the degradation of natural resources in designated forests that are among the protected forests in South Sulawesi, Indonesia. Although a comprehensive system of laws exists to protect these forests, the persistence of extensive environmental degradation reveals weaknesses in implementation and enforcement. Subjects and Methods: A qualitative approach was employed, involving interviews with governmental officials, local community leaders, the National Offices of Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs), and field officers. This was complemented by analysis of policy documents and direct field observations to capture both institutional and practical dimensions of forest governance. Results: The study finds that environmental degradation persists due to entrenched institutional fragmentation, limited capacity within forest management units (KPH), inter-agency tensions, and poor coordination across vertical and horizontal levels of governance. Furthermore, there is a critical mismatch between state-led conservation programs and community livelihoods, worsened by limited communal planning and a lack of viable economic alternatives for forest-dependent populations. Conclusions: The paper contributes to management literature by redefining environmental regulatory effectiveness beyond legal compliance, emphasizing institutional governance, stakeholder alignment, and strategic adaptation. It concludes that effective conservation depends on multi-stakeholder governance, institutional reform, co-management structures, and adaptive governance tools that align with the socio-ecological realities of South Sulawesi’s forests.
The Influence of Stakeholder Participation and Institutional Coordination on the Effectiveness of Adaptive Coastal Governance in Bulukumba Landoni, Fira; Oktaviani, Indri; Susianti, Susianti
Adaptive Governance Research Vol. 2 No. 1 (2025): Adaptive Governance Research
Publisher : Pemuda Peduli Publikasi Insan Ilmiah

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.71435/639067

Abstract

Purpose: This research paper examines how stakeholder involvement and institutional coordination influence the success of adaptive coastal governance in Bulukumba, Indonesia. Grounded in the strategic-management perspective, the study emphasizes the importance of participatory approaches and managerial processes in governance effectiveness. Subjects and Methods: The research employs a quantitative design, drawing on survey data from 174 respondents representing governmental agencies, coastal communities, non-governmental organizations (NGOs), and individual actors in coastal affairs. The relationships between variables were analyzed using inferential statistical techniques, specifically Pearson correlation and multiple linear regression, to assess both the strength and significance of the associations. Results: The findings demonstrate that both stakeholder engagement and institutional coordination exert significant impacts on governance effectiveness, with stakeholder engagement emerging as the stronger predictor. Participatory decision-making, consultative procedures, and the cultivation of trust among stakeholders play a more decisive role than top-down execution of policies. While institutional coordination showed a less prominent effect, it still contributes meaningfully and requires structural transparency, sectoral alignment, and interwoven roles to realize its full capacity. Conclusions: The study argues that adaptive governance is not merely a matter of policy design but a managerial process that should prioritize harmonizing interests, sharing responsibilities, and building capacity within and across institutions. Moreover, it offers policymakers practical strategies to foster participatory and coordinated coastal governance. Ultimately, by tracking and assessing key factors critical to governance performance, the study enriches understanding of how coastal regions in Indonesia and similar emerging contexts can pursue more sustainable and adaptive governance practices.

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