Artikel (70)
Community Service Order an alternative sentencing aimed at reducing dependence on imprisonment while restoring social balance within the community. This study examines how the Community Service Order can represent the values of social justice as reflected in the fifth principle of Pancasila. The stu...
Pancasila and Law Review; Vol 6 No 2 (2025); 135-150 | 2026
This research examines the intersection of international law and the controversial proposal by former US President Donald Trump regarding the forced transfer of Palestinian civilians from Gaza. The study places this issue within the framework of ethnic cleansing and the prohibition of population tra...
Pancasila and Law Review; Vol 6 No 2 (2025); 121-134 | 2026
Critically examines Indonesia’s national education paradigm by addressing the ontological tension between contemporary scientific rationality and the ethical–constitutional foundations of Pancasila. Drawing on a qualitative philosophical approach grounded in systematic hermeneutic analysis of pr...
Pancasila and Law Review; Vol 6 No 2 (2025); 107-120 | 2026
The philosophical foundation of copyright law in Indonesia has often been addressed normatively, yet its ethical grounding in Pancasila has not been systematically examined. This article argues that Indonesian copyright law embodies a normative synthesis between economic utilitarianism and personali...
Pancasila and Law Review; Vol 6 No 2 (2025); 93-106 | 2026
Sexual violence persists in Nigeria despite ratification of major human rights treaties and enactment of domestic legislation such as the Violence Against Persons (Prohibition) Act. This study assesses whether Nigeria’s legal and institutional frameworks provide effective protection for women, foc...
Pancasila and Law Review; Vol 6 No 1 (2025); 67-80 | 2026
The principle of the rule of law (rechtsstaat) positions law as the primary safeguard of justice and democracy. In Indonesian constitutional practice, however, law often operates under political influence through legal politicization. This occurs when legal instruments are used to advance political ...
Pancasila and Law Review; Vol 6 No 2 (2025); 81-92 | 2026
Law Number 16 of 2025 allows foreign nationals to occupy strategic positions in State-Owned Enterprises, triggering debate between the demands of modernization in a globalized economy and the principle of national economic sovereignty under Article 33 of the 1945 Constitution. This normative legal s...
Pancasila and Law Review; Vol 6 No 1 (2025); 57-66 | 2026
This study examines the relationship between customary law communities and the ideology of Pancasila within Indonesia’s legal philosophy. Article 18B Paragraph (2) of the 1945 Constitution affirms state recognition of customary law communities and their long-standing social, legal, and cultural sy...
Pancasila and Law Review; Vol 6 No 1 (2025): Issue In progress (January 2025); 45-56 | 2025
Phishing in Indonesia presents significant risks to privacy and data security. This study employs a normative juridical approach to analyze the protection of personal data, with attention to both preventive and repressive legal mechanisms. It assesses the effectiveness of Law No. 27 of 2022 on Perso...
Pancasila and Law Review; Vol 6 No 1 (2025): Issue In progress (January 2025); 15-44 | 2025
The ratification of Indonesia’s new Criminal Code (KUHP) on December 6, 2022, has sparked concerns over potential restrictions on human rights, particularly the right to freedom of expression. These concerns arise from the reintroduction of the article on insulting the president, which had been an...
Pancasila and Law Review; Vol 6 No 1 (2025): Issue In progress (January 2025); 1-14 | 2025