Artikel (76)
The rapid growth of cryptocurrency trading in Indonesia presents both opportunities and systemic risks to the national financial system. Cryptocurrency exchanges, as digital asset intermediaries, remain vulnerable to fraud , cyberattacks, market manipulation, and regulatory uncertainty. This study e...
Indonesia Private Law Review; Vol 7 No 1 (2026); 51-66 | 2026
Contract interpretation remains a contested issue in contract law, particularly under the Indonesian Civil Code, which reflects a civil law tradition that prioritizes textual interpretation. Modern commercial practice, however, demands a more contextual approach. This article examines how Indonesia ...
Indonesia Private Law Review; Vol 7 No 1 (2026); 35-50 | 2026
Trademark protection is a fundamental element of intellectual property law that supports innovation, economic growth, and legal certainty while increasingly contributing to sustainable development through fair business practices, local market strengthening, and sustainable employment. This study exa...
Indonesia Private Law Review; Vol 7 No 1 (2026); 13-34 | 2026
Indonesia’s agricultural sector remains dominated by traditional rice farming that contributes modestly to GDP, while farmers face rising risks of crop failure due to climate change and other external factors. This condition reveals a gap between the legal objective of farmer protection and empowe...
Indonesia Private Law Review; Vol 7 No 1 (2026); 1-12 | 2026
In cases of murder or suspicious death, an autopsy reports serve as crucial evidence in criminal adjudication. Based on Indonesian criminal procedural law, a Visum et Repertum issued by an authorized forensic doctor is legally recognized as expert evidence for determining the cause, manner, and circ...
Indonesia Private Law Review; Vol 6 No 2 (2025); 177-192 | 2026
This study examines the conflict resolution practices of Baduy, Kajang, and Suku Anak Dalam (SAD) Jambi communities, all of whom continue to apply customary law to address violations within their territories. Using a combination of normative and empirical methods with snowball data collection, the r...
Indonesia Private Law Review; Vol 6 No 2 (2025); 159-176 | 2026
This study examines the legal recognition of electronic notarial acts in Indonesia and the regulatory inconsistencies among the Notary Law, the Electronic Information and Transactions (ITE) Law, and the Indonesian Civil Code. These inconsistencies prevent notaries from issuing authentic electronic d...
Indonesia Private Law Review; Vol 6 No 2 (2025); 147-158 | 2026
Ownership risk (daman milkiyyah) is a core doctrine in Islamic contract law, as it determines the lawful transfer of liability and entitlement to profit in financial transactions, and its misallocation may result in products that are formally Sharia compliant but substantively deficient. This study ...
Indonesia Private Law Review; Vol 6 No 2 (2025); 133-158 | 2025
Micro, Small, and Medium Enterprises (MSMEs) are central to Indonesia’s economy but remain highly vulnerable during financial crises, partly due to the absence of a dedicated insolvency regime under Law No. 37 of 2004. This study identifies structural gaps in Indonesia’s bankruptcy framework, pa...
Indonesia Private Law Review; Vol 6 No 2 (2025); 117-132 | 2025
Although CEDAW, the CRC, Indonesian law, and Supreme Court regulations provide a normative basis for protecting women’s and children’s rights after divorce, implementation in practice remains challenging. This paper examines how Religious Courts ensure the fulfillment of these rights, offering t...
Indonesia Private Law Review; Vol 6 No 2 (2025); 103-116 | 2025