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Journal of Society and Governance http://journal.unhas.ac.id/index.php/jsg <div class="row" style="display: flex;"><div class="column" style="flex: 65%; padding: 8px;"><div style="border: 1px dotted; padding: 8px; background: #FFEBCD;"><ul><li>pISSN: <a href="http://u.lipi.go.id/1491801083" target="_blank">2579-5996</a></li><li>eISSN:<a href="http://u.lipi.go.id/1491812139" target="_blank">2579-6003</a></li></ul></div><p>Journal of Society and Governance (JSG)publishes original and quality research, literature reviews, conceptual papers and book reviews twice a year (January and July) related to social sciences, including (but not limited) to sociology, political sciences, public administration, public policy, communication studies, journalism, public relations, cultural anthropology, local government, international relations, and development studies</p></div><div class="column" style="flex: 10%; padding: 5px;"><img src="/public/site/images/jejen/JSG-.jpg" alt="" /></div></div> en-US <strong>Open Access Principles</strong><br /><ol><li>The Journal of Society and Governance (JSG) is committed to real and immediate open access for academic work. All of the JSG’s articles and reviews are free to access immediately from the date of publication.</li><li>There are no author charges prior to publication, and no charge for any reader to download articles and reviews for their own scholarly use.</li><li>The JSG does not, therefore, operate either a Gold or Green model of open access, but is free to all at any time and in perpetuity.</li><li>To maintain the Open and Free access, the JSG depends upon the financial support provided by the Faculty of Social and Political Science, Hasanuddin University, the goodwill of its editorial team and advisory board, and the continuing support of its network of peer reviewers.</li></ol><p><strong>Licensing</strong></p><p>A Creative Commons <a href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nd/4.0/">Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 (CC BY-ND 4.0)</a> license applies to all contents published in JSG. While articles published on JSG can be copied by anyone for noncommercial purposes if proper credit is given, all materials are published under an open-access license with authors retaining full and permanent ownership of their work. JSG retains a perpetual, non-exclusive right to publish the work and to include it in other aggregations and indexes to achieve broader impact and visibility.</p><p>Authors are responsible for and required to ascertain that they are in possession of image rights for any and all photographs, illustrations, and figures included in their work or to obtain publication or reproduction rights from the rights holders.</p><p>Contents of the journal will be registered with the <a href="https://doaj.org/" target="_blank">Directory of Open Access Journals</a> and similar repositories. In submitting their work for publication in JSG, authors agree to the terms set above. Authors are free and encouraged to store their work elsewhere, for instance in institutional repositories or websites such as academia.edu, researchgate.com, mendeley.com, etc., to increase circulation (see <a href="http://opcit.eprints.org/oacitation-biblio.html">The Effects of Open Access</a>). Authors are also able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the non-exclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the work with an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal. JSG does not charge any reprint fees and it is not necessary to contact JSG for permission. </p><p> </p> ishaq@unhas.ac.id (Ishaq Rahman) janisalande@gmail.com (Janisa Pascawati Lande) Wed, 23 May 2018 00:00:00 +0000 OJS 3.2.1.1 http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/tech/rss 60 Institutionalization Process Dymension of Political Parties (Study of Institutionalization of Golkar Party in South Sulawesi Province) http://journal.unhas.ac.id/index.php/jsg/article/view/4178 <p align="left"> </p><p align="center"><strong>Abstract</strong></p><p>This study was intended to describe the dynamics of institutional processes run by the political parties in strengthening the position and role in the democratic system. Institutional process oriented by the party dynamics in building political strength that comes from internal and external mechanisms. In addition, it is understood that the institutionalization built a consensus of shared internal consolidation of all party members. Study of institutionalization in this research using the idea of Guelermo O'Donnell and Vicky Randall stated that the process of structural stabilization of the political parties are use the strong patterns of behavior and culture. While the method used is the thought of Edmund Husserl emphasizes the qualitative method in which phenomenological tradition assumes the subjective meaning based on real observations of the social and political orders. The results of this research showed that there is a transformation of public understanding, especially at the credibility on political parties. The credibility can be gained when a political party is particularly strong in the party institutionalization.</p><p> </p><p> </p> Gustiana A. Kambo Copyright (c) 2018 Journal of Society and Governance http://journal.unhas.ac.id/index.php/jsg/article/view/4178 Tue, 26 Dec 2017 00:00:00 +0000 The Effectiveness of BPKP Fraud Audit Finding on Determining the Level of Corruption in Indonesian Provinces http://journal.unhas.ac.id/index.php/jsg/article/view/4194 <p align="center"><strong>Abstract</strong></p><p>This study aims to investigate the role of government auditing to restrain corruption. Hereby, it focuses on the effectiveness of performance of the Indonesian Finance and Development Supervisory Agency, known as Badan Pengawasan Keuangan dan Pembangunan (BPKP) as the internal auditor institution of the Indonesian President. The results show that BPKP fraud audit finding of irregularities has a positive relationship with the corruption level in Indonesian provinces. Data are used from provincial-level governments over the period 2012-2015 which produces 128 province-year observations. The study result shows that the irregularities found by BPKP fraud audit influence the level of corruption in the Indonesian provinces.</p><p> </p><p> </p> Chekat Fahmy Rosyadi, Tjerk Budding Copyright (c) 2018 Journal of Society and Governance http://journal.unhas.ac.id/index.php/jsg/article/view/4194 Mon, 11 Dec 2017 00:00:00 +0000