Academic literature on the topic 'Lombok (Island)'

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Journal articles on the topic "Lombok (Island)"

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Wafiroh, Ani. "ACCURATE THE DIRECTION OF QIBLA MOSQUE IN THE ISLAND OF A THOUSAND MOSQUES USING THEODOLITE." Al-IHKAM: Jurnal Hukum Keluarga Jurusan Ahwal al-Syakhshiyyah Fakultas Syariah IAIN Mataram 11, no. 1 (June 17, 2019): 41–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.20414/alihkam.v11i1.2117.

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Lombok Island is famous for its Thousand Islands mosque. This is because on the island of Lombok there are very many mosques, almost every neighborhood (RW) has a mosque and it is not uncommon to find 2 large mosques facing or next to each other. Of the many mosques on the island of Lombok, there are several mosque buildings facing west, and there are also facing west leading north. This shows the difference in Qibla direction, so the need for calculations and re-measurements.
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Basarudin, Basarudin. "Sejarah Perkembangan Islam di Pulau Lombok pada Abad Ke-17." SANGKéP: Jurnal Kajian Sosial Keagamaan 2, no. 1 (July 18, 2019): 31–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.20414/sangkep.v2i1.933.

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This paper describes the history of the development of islam in Lombokin the 17 thcentury, showing that the island of Lombok is one of theplaces where Islam carried out by Sunan Prapen from East Java. Thehistory of the spread of Islam is very interesting to study in the regionbicause some buildings show that Islam has spread very quickly. SinceIslam entered the Island of Lombok which began around the 17 thcentury AD was brought from South Sulawesi, and distributed throughthe island of Sumbawa. After the arrival of Islam the teachings have notbeen maximally applied on the island of Lombok. This can be seen in thedevelopment of Islamic teachings in Lima and the teachings of Islam ofTelu Time until now, which are still developing, such as in Bayan andLingsar.
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Latifa, Amalia. "Analisis Percepatan Getaran Tanah Maksimum Untuk Memetakan Kerawanan Bencana Gempa Bumi dengan Metode Fukushima-Tanaka, Esteva dan Euclidean Distance di Pulau Lombok." Jurnal Ilmu dan Inovasi Fisika 6, no. 2 (August 8, 2022): 123–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.24198/jiif.v6i2.39037.

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Lombok island is a small area located on the border between the large Asian plate and the Autralian plate so that the islan of Lombok is verry vulnerable to the earthquake disasters. The level of damage caused by an earthquake depends on the strength and quality of the building, geological, and geotechtonic conditions and the maximum ground vibration acceleration of the area. This study aims to analyze the acceleration of ground vibrations to map earthquake vulnerability using the Fukushima Tanaka, Esteva, and Euclidean Distance methods on the island of Lombok. The data used is secondary data for earthquakes on the island of Lombok in Juli-September 2018. The calculation result show that the maximum ground vibration acceleration value is the highest of 100.810 gal located in the districts of EastbLombok and North Lombok. While the smallestmaximum ground vibrations acceleration value occurs in the Mataram and surrounding areas with a value of 0,3603 gal. From the three formulations, it can be seen that the value of ground vibration acceleration calculated in the area of the island of Lombok using the Fukushima Tanaka method is the most appropriate formula for calculating the value of ground accelaration on the Lombok island. That is because the value of the ground vibration acceleration from Fukushima Tanaka is almost the same as the ground vibration acceleration value from the accelerograph
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Mandalika, Eka Nurminda Dewi. "MARKETING ANALYSIS OF ARWOOD IN LOMBOK ISLAND." Journal of Agri Rinjani: Social Agricultural Economics - Faculty of Agriculture, UGR 2, no. 2 (December 27, 2022): 110–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.53952/jar.v2i2.200.

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This study aims to determine the marketing channel and the efficiency level of marketing of gaharu on Lombok Island. This research was conducted in four regions: West Lombok Regency, North Lombok Regency, Central Lombok Regency, and Mataram City. The respondents consisted of four people: three district-level collectors and one exporter. Determining marketing agency respondents is done using the "Snowball Sampling" method. The analysis tool used is profit analysis of marketing institutions and analysis of marketing efficiency. The results of this study indicate that there are three marketing channels for Lombok Island agarwood. The profits of each marketing agency for the Lombok Island agarwood from November to December 2012 amounted to Rp. 2,125,000 per kilogram for Regency collectors and Rp. 364,400,000 per kilogram for agarwood exporters. Looking at the great potential of the agarwood commodity from Lombok Island, further research is needed to determine the development of the marketing of agarwood on Lombok Island.
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Wildan, Wildan, Aliefman Hakim, and Supriadi Supriadi. "Pengetahuan, Sikap, dan Perilaku Remaja di Pulau Lombok Terhadap Isu Pemanasan Global." Jurnal Penelitian Pendidikan IPA 6, no. 1 (December 16, 2019): 45. http://dx.doi.org/10.29303/jppipa.v6i1.319.

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This survey research aimed to understand the relationship between knowledge and attitudes of pupils on Lombok Island on the issue of global warming. The research sample of 267 students were randomly drawn from 6 state high schools in Lombok Island. Knowledge data were collected using tests, attitude and behavior data towards global warming were collected using a questionnaire. Data analysis used regression and correlation techniques. This study concluded: (1) there was a relationship between knowledge and the behavior of pupils on Lombok Island on the issue of global warming; (2) There was a relationship between attitude and behavior of pupils on Lombok Island on the issue of global warming; (3) there was a positive relationship between knowledge and attitudes with adolescent behavior on Lombok Island.
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Mutaqin, Bachtiar W., Franck Lavigne, Patrick Wassmer, Martine Trautmann, Puncak Joyontono, Christopher Gomez, Bagus Septiangga, Jean-Christophe Komorowski, Junun Sartohadi, and Danang Sri Hadmoko. "Evidence of Unknown Paleo-Tsunami Events along the Alas Strait, West Sumbawa, Indonesia." Geosciences 11, no. 2 (January 23, 2021): 46. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/geosciences11020046.

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Indonesia is exposed to earthquakes, volcanic activities, and associated tsunamis. This is particularly the case for Lombok and Sumbawa Islands in West Nusa Tenggara, where evidence of tsunamis is frequently observed in its coastal sedimentary record. If the 1815 CE Tambora eruption on Sumbawa Island generated a tsunami with well-identified traces on the surrounding islands, little is known about the consequences of the 1257 CE tremendous eruption of Samalas on the neighboring islands, and especially about the possible tsunamis generated in reason of a paucity of research on coastal sedimentary records in this area. However, on Lombok Island, the eruption of the Samalas volcano produced significant volumes of pyroclastic flows that entered the sea in the North and East of the island. These phenomena must have produced a tsunami that left their traces, especially on Sumbawa Island, whose western coastline is only 14 km away from Lombok’s eastern shore. Therefore, the main goal of this study is to investigate, find evidence, and determine the age of marine-origin sediments along the shore of the Alas Strait, Indonesia. We collected and analyzed samples of coral and seashells from marine deposits identified along the west coast of Sumbawa, i.e., in Belang Island and abandoned fishponds in Kiantar Village, in order to identify the sources and the occurrence period of these deposits events. Based on the radiocarbon dating of coral and seashell samples, we concluded that none of the identified marine deposits along the western coast of Sumbawa could be related chronologically to the 1257 CE eruption of Samalas. However, possible tsunami deposits located in Belang Island and abandoned fishponds in Kiantar Village yielded 4th century CE, 9th century CE, and 17th century CE. We also conclude that past large earthquakes triggered these tsunamis since no known volcanic eruption occurred near the Alas Strait at that time that may have triggered a tsunami.
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Zainuri, Zainuri, Abbas Zaini, Wiharyani Werdiningsih, and Taslim Sjah. "KERAGAMAN PANGAN LOKAL DI PULAU LOMBOK UNTUK MENUNJANG PENGEMBANGAN PARIWISATA (Diversity of Local Foods in Lombok Island to Support Tourism Development)." Jurnal Agritech 36, no. 02 (October 11, 2016): 206. http://dx.doi.org/10.22146/agritech.12866.

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Lombok Island is potential in providing agricultural raw materials that can be developed into local food products thatin turn support the development of tourism in this island. This study aimed at identifying kinds of local food productsavailable in Lombok Island, and their quantity. To achieve these purposes, research was designed in descriptive methodsuch that the study revealed the picture of the situation of local food in Lombok Island. Data analyses were follow-on,and revealed that there are several local foods made of/from agricultural raw materials. They have various productionvalues, and there ais adjustment of production (supply) to demand that exists. Some major local food products include’Bulayak’ satay and kerupuk kulit (animal skin crackers). There are also products that are typical to Lombok Island, i.e.Bulayak satay, Taliwang chicken, Tanjung satay (of fish)(from North Lombok), Opak-opak (sort of cracker), pelecingkangkung (traditional Lombok salad), and jajan bantal (made of mix glutinised rice and bananas) (from East Lombok).Keywords: Agroindustry, demand, local food, Lombok Island, supply, tourismABSTRAKPotensi hasil pertanian sangat besar untuk dikembangkan menjadi produk pangan lokal yang dapat mendukungpengembangan pariwisata daerah, dan saat ini telah ada beberapa produk pangan lokal direalisasikan di berbagaiwilayah di Pulau Lombok.Tujuan dari tulisan ini antara lain untuk: (1) mengidentifikasi keragaman pangan lokal yangada di Pulau Lombok, dan (2) mengetahui jumlah ketersediaan pangan lokal di Pulau Lombok.Untuk mencapai tujuanpenulisan ini telah dilakukan penelitian yang dirancang untuk mendeskripsikan kondisi yang ada, dengan melakukansurvei ke lokasi-lokasi yang dapat memberikan data yang dibutuhkan.Selanjutnya data yang diperoleh dianalisis sesuaidengan kebutuhan penelitian. Hasil kajian menunjukkan bahwa di Pulau Lombok terdapat beberapa produk pangan lokaldengan nilai produksi (omzet penjualan) yang bervariasi dari yang besar hingga yang kecil. Besar-kecilnya produksiproduk pangan lokal ini terjadi karena produsen menyesuaikan diri dengan permintaan yang ada. Beberapa produkyang menonjol (dihitung dari nilai produksinya) di seluruh Pulau Lombok adalah sate bulayak dan kerupuk kulit.Produk-produk pangan lokal yang dinilai mempunyai kekhasan Pulau Lombok adalah sate bulayak, ayam Taliwang,sate Tanjung (Lombok Utara), opak-opak, pelecing kangkung, dan jajan bantal (Lombok Timur).Kata kunci: Agroindustri, pangan lokal, pariwisata, penawaran, permintaan, Pulau Lombok
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Syafitri, Yanita, Bahtiar Bahtiar, and Lalu A. Didik. "ANALISIS PERGESERAN LEMPENG BUMI YANG MENINGKATKAN POTENSI TERJADINYA GEMPA BUMI DI PULAU LOMBOK." KONSTAN - JURNAL FISIKA DAN PENDIDIKAN FISIKA 4, no. 2 (January 14, 2020): 139–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.20414/konstan.v4i2.43.

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This research is a qualitative research. Where the purpose of this research is to find out how the shifts of the earth’s plates around Lombok Island can increase the frequency of potential earthquakes on Lombok Island. This study uses a qualitative approach by paying attention to the theory of earth’s plates and the movements of the earh’s plates that have been described previously. The results of this study indicate a link between earth plate shifts and the frequency of earthquakes on Lombok Island. The world’s active tectonic plates in which the movements of two of them (the Indo-Australian Plate and the Eurasian Plate) greatly affect the frequency of earthquakes due to passing through Lombok Island. In addition to the two active tectonics plates of the world, there is also one Fault namely the Flores Up Fault which stretches from Flores to Lombok Island which forms a trough amd is very active.
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Fahlevi, Mochammad, Rita, Arbi Siti Rabiah, Indry Aristianto Pradipta, Alan Marta, and Fauzan Dipo. "Tourism and Absorption of The Labor Force in Indonesia: A Strategy for Development." E3S Web of Conferences 202 (2020): 16001. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/e3sconf/202020216001.

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The poor quality of labor causes low productivity and competitiveness. The objective of this study was to mediate the effect of labor absorption on economic growth in the tourism area of Lombok island. This study used the total population of the Lombok island community in three popular destinations to date among others are Senggigi Beach, Kuta Beach Lombok, and Gili Trawangan Beach with a total of 275.267 respondents. This study used random sampling because the total population is more than 100 respondents. The result found that direct or indirect effects in mediating labor absorption towards economic growth in the tourism area of Lombok island are great. Other results showed a strong indicator in each variable that affects labor absorption towards economic growth in the tourism area of Lombok island namely having the skills and fair business competition
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Bunaga, I. Gusti Ketut Satria, Mohammad Syamsu Rosid, and Titi Anggono. "Existence of Faults that Cause Earthquakes on Lombok Island: A Critical Literature Review." Jurnal Penelitian Pendidikan IPA 8, no. 6 (December 28, 2022): 2827–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.29303/jppipa.v8i6.2346.

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This study qualitatively elaborates fault characteristics causing earthquakes in Lombok Island. Historically, Lombok Island has been 12 destructive and significant earthquakes in period of 1979 – 2018. Therefore, the island is in an earthquake-prone region. The hazard factor is one of the key factors in assessing risk. This study become important as their potential to have a big impact. A source of activity that has not been fully investigated in detail was the location of the recent major and devastating earthquake (East Lombok earthquake 2019). Consequently, there is a chance that the level of risk on the Island of Lombok will rise. According to the study’s results, a thorough investigation is required to identify and pinpoint the cause of the 2019 Lombok earthquake in order to improve the earthquake risk index and help the local government to reduce losses due to earthquakes.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Lombok (Island)"

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Islamy, G. (Gusti). "Educational challenges in a small island community:a case study in Gili Asahan, Lombok, Indonesia." Master's thesis, University of Oulu, 2018. http://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:oulu-201805101737.

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This Master’s thesis focuses on educational challenges in a small island community, that is Gili Asahan village in Lombok, Indonesia. The idea for this study emerged from a voluntary organization called Kelas Inspirasi, which has an initiative to send volunteer teachers to overcome the lack of teaching staff on the island. The challenges found during the case study did not concern only the lack of teacher’s presence but also teaching in the multi-grade class setting as well as challenges in school’s facilities and infrastructure and furthermore, the influence of the rural community on schooling. After the researcher discovered the educational challenges of in this small island community, she set out to find possible solutions to overcome these issues. The research is based on a case study. The researcher observed the location in its natural setting collecting the data of all daily activities inside and outside the classroom, making field notes. Hence, she was both a participant researcher and a voluntary teacher of a multi-grade class in the local primary school. The data was analyzed through explanation building by reflecting on the theoretical proposition as a connection link to the real event. Through the iterative process, the researcher was trying to compare findings and propositions, integrating the context and adding additional details until she gets the holistic and comprehensive analysis to understand the issue. According to the findings, in this kind of remote and isolated islands, multi-grade classes are a necessity. The sparse population and difficult geographic conditions lead to difficulties in hiring more than one teacher. In this village, there were only 20 students enrolled in the primary school with grades 1, 2, and 4. The teacher-researcher was not prepared to teach in the multi-grade setting, so managing the classroom became oftentimes very challenging. Students were not properly engaged in the schooling process, they experienced neither sense of belonging nor autonomy in the classroom. Understandably, this led to students’ low study motivation as they became passive receivers, with the unfortunate outcome of future failure in schooling. While, the role of the community in the formal schooling process is not active and encouraging, the school merely becomes a place to entrust the children when parents go to work. The researcher argues that in spite of some disadvantages, multi-grade classes have a potential to support Education for All, even in remote and isolated locations. However, teachers’ preparation in the multi-grade settings should start already in teacher training. The knowledge of multi-grade teaching could wane mismanagement in the classroom environment, overcome the limited resources, and maximize teacher’s presence to support active learners. The cooperation between community and school should be addressed to promote the “pedagogy of place” concept where teachers could design lessons according to children’s daily life in small island communities.
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Wangiyana, Wayan. "Environmental regionalisation for the identification of potential legume production areas on Lombok Island using geographic information system /." View thesis, 1994. http://library.uws.edu.au/adt-NUWS/public/adt-NUWS20030627.111036/index.html.

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Thesis (Ms. Sc)--University of Western Sydney, Hawkesbury, 1994.
"A thesis submitted in fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Science (Hons.) in Environmental Sciences." Includes bibliographical references (p. 170-177).
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Tanaya, I. Gusti Lanang Parta. "A study of agribusiness supply chain systems for small farmers in dryland areas of Lombok Island Indonesia : a pluralistic approach." Thesis, Curtin University, 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/2475.

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Despite the contribution that agriculture makes to the Indonesian Gross Domestic Product, the income of small subsistence farmers continues to fall. While many development activities and policies have been implemented to reduce the gap in income between farmers and non-farmers, the situation remains unchanged. In part this is because the majority of research has focused on improving production rather than addressing the social and economic aspects of farming and its supply chains. Very few approaches have adopted a holistic systems approach. This study examines holistically the agri-food supply chains of dryland farmers of Lombok, in eastern Indonesia, using a pluralistic approach. The objective of this study was to investigate the utility of developing a pluralistic model which combined the benefits of SSM with hard systems approaches like statistical and technical efficiency analyses and test this approach on the agri-food supply chains of dryland farmers of Lombok, in eastern Indonesia.Agribusiness is a complex social system both to understand and to manage but is also driven heavily by the need to produce efficiently for a market. This means that solving problems within such systems requires the melding of both the qualitative and quantitative aspects in a pluralistic way. The research presented here combines an interpretative research approach the Soft Systems Methodology (SSM) with hard systems tools like descriptive and inferential statistical analyses, and technical efficiency analysis.The SSM analysis was successful in identifying a feasible pathway for change for the agri-food supply chains studied. The key benefits of adopting this approach was its ability to produce realistic and feasible solutions in a culturally acceptable way and to unconsciously help the supply chain members to understand, look at, think, analyse and solve their problems through collaborative action. It is however, a complex tool to use and there is a need to develop a simplified SSM approach which significantly reduces the sophisticated systems jargon and technical terms that have been developed by the SSM research community if it is to be adopted more widely for use in solving agri-food supply chain problems in developing countries.The farm productivity analysis found significant variations in the technical efficiency of the farms analyzed; from 47.6 to 94.5 per cent, indicating that there is still significant opportunity for improvements in production practices. Age and education were found to significantly affect farm-specific technical efficiency suggesting that programs that educated the rural young generally, but more specifically in new innovations and farm management practices, would show production efficiency benefits.An analysis of the marketing system revealed that a number of market intermediaries were involved in the marketing and distribution of agricultural commodities. Market intermediaries arrange for the collection, consolidation and subsequent transport of the product and to varying degrees, with the sorting, grading and packing of the product to better fulfill downstream customers’ needs. Quality at the farm gate was problematic, for much of the product is sold under the tebasan system where there are few incentives for quality and farmers face difficulties in disposing of product which fails to meet customers’ expectations. As the quality of the product deteriorates as it moves down the supply chain, the marketing margin increases to cover the increasing losses, and the uncertainty of price inherent in highly volatile commodity markets. In order to reduce risk, farmers and downstream market intermediaries prefer to transact with those exchange partners with whom they have developed long-term relationships. However, in the absence of reliable market information and the propensity for actors to sell to whichever market intermediary offers the highest price, little trust is evident in the exchange. As the geographic distance between actors increase, relationships down the supply chain become increasingly less personal and more businesslike.This study resulted in a new pluralistic model for analyzing the agribusiness supply chain of Lombok referred to as the Lombok Method (LM). This pluralistic approach was found to be a more effective way to analyse and design solutions than SSM alone for the following reasons. First, the inclusion of hard system analysis enhanced the robustness of the model produced which in turn means it can be validated and challenged. Secondly, hard systems approaches were used to verify the findings of the SSM and also provide feedback into the SSM. Finally, the SSM was able to bring the experience of the participants to the interpretation of the hard system analysis.While the model was successful in providing some solutions to the problems experienced in the supply chains, the research also highlighted the need to do further studies that 1) identify the nature and scale of market failure, 2) apply optimization techniques to supply chain systems and 3) identify a means of including external variables like climate in the model. There may also be a role for modeling the relationships between supply chain participants using structural equation modeling (SEM) or causal loop diagrams (CLD). With a focus on SSM there is a need to develop a simplified approach for use in developing countries and establishing standards for the conduct of human interaction in the SSM process.
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Zubaidah, Teti. "Spatio-temporal characteristics of the geomagnetic field over the Lombok Island, the Lesser Sunda Islands region : new geological, tectonic, and seismo-electromagnetic insights along the Sunda-Banda Arcs transition." Potsdam Deutsches GeoForschungsZentrum GFZ, 2010. http://d-nb.info/1001919300/34.

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Schellhorn, Matthias. "Rural tourism in the 'Third World' : the dialectic of development : the case of Desa Senaru at Gunung Rinjani National Park in Lombok Island." Phd thesis, Lincoln University. Environment, Society and Design Division, 2007. http://theses.lincoln.ac.nz/public/adt-NZLIU20080221.124834/.

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This thesis examines the effectiveness of tourism as an agent of rural development, focusing on culture and nature-based destinations in the 'developing world'. The village of Desa Senaru at Gunung Rinjani National Park in Lombok Island, Indonesia, served as a case study. Conservation agencies frequently support tourism development as a sustainable alternative to more extractive resource uses. Integrated conservation models, in particular, present 'eco'tourism as an effective instrument to enhance rural livelihoods while protecting the environment. Alongside international aid agencies, the World Tourism Organisation (UNWTO) also promotes the sector for its poverty reduction potential in 'third world' countries. Rural communities hold concomitant expectations of tourism's socio-cultural development potential. Furthermore, 'eco'tourism functions as a growing niche market for the globally expanding tourism industry and local entrepreneurs. As such it fits well into the economic rationale that underpins neo-liberal market strategies. With such a diversity of interests at stake, the question "What kind of business is tourism?" has become more complex, critical and pertinent than ever before. Informed by development theories and the sociology of tourism, this analysis focuses on the multiple dichotomies that characterise 'third world' tourism. In the case of tourism development in Desa Senaru, several paradoxical outcomes have been identified. The most profound of these is the 'social justice paradox' that describes the way tourism costs and benefits are distributed within a heterogeneous community of native residents and migrant settlers. While most of the case study's tourism attractions are part of the cultural heritage of the wetu telu Sasak hamlets, these derive few economic benefits and struggle to access the new development opportunities 'eco'tourism offers. Filtered and directed by historical political relations, several key barriers to a meaningful participation of these native people in the 'business of tourism' have been identified. These include the prevailing conditions of education, culture, ethnicity, socio-economy, location, mobility, skills and knowledge. Expectations of 'eco'tourism as a 'soft' industry analysed vis-à-vis the global biosphere effects of air transport highlight the 'eco-paradox' of international tourism. The cleavage between the poverty-focused aid policies of the New Zealand Government and an integrated conservation project, whose benefits local elites have largely captured, illustrates the 'project paradox' of rural tourism development programmes. In the 'development paradox' of cultural tourism, symbolic constructs of 'otherness' (such as 'aesthetic poverty') contrast with various development agendas; in their search for the 'real' traditional village, for example, the tourists reject all signifiers of material progress and modernity. Their curious gaze at the spiritual practices and everyday life world of the wetu telu villagers manifests opposite a recent history of state-sanctioned religious discrimination. Taken together, these paradoxical local outcomes emphasize the significance of power relations and political dimensions within the globally expanding 'business of tourism'. Ethical considerations are an important aspect of this study as they contribute towards an 'ethic of development' that, so far, has found little theoretical resonance amongst scholars of tourism studies. To operationalise the ethical concerns raised, the thesis posits a model of a holistic approach to development. This recognises tourism as a complex open system.
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Zubaidah, Teti [Verfasser]. "Spatio-temporal characteristics of the geomagnetic field over the Lombok Island, the Lesser Sunda Islands region : new geological, tectonic, and seismo-electromagnetic insights along the Sunda-Banda Arcs transition / Teti Zubaidah. Deutsches GeoForschungsZentrum GFZ." Potsdam : Deutsches GeoForschungsZentrum GFZ, 2010. http://d-nb.info/1001919300/34.

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Karlina. "ASSESSMENT OF HYDRO-METEOROLOGICAL DROUGHTS RELATED TO ENSO IN LOMBOK AND SUMATRA ISLANDS, INDONESIA." Kyoto University, 2018. http://hdl.handle.net/2433/231991.

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付記する学位プログラム名: グローバル生存学大学院連携プログラム
Kyoto University (京都大学)
0048
新制・課程博士
博士(工学)
甲第21058号
工博第4422号
新制||工||1687(附属図書館)
京都大学大学院工学研究科社会基盤工学専攻
(主査)教授 寶 馨, 教授 堀 智晴, 准教授 佐山 敬洋
学位規則第4条第1項該当
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Archer, John. "A church planting strategy for Lombok." Theological Research Exchange Network (TREN), 1995. http://www.tren.com.

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Restiati, Made. "An epidemiological study of diseases affecting livestock on the islands of Bali and Lombok, Indonesia." Thesis, Restiati, Made (1996) An epidemiological study of diseases affecting livestock on the islands of Bali and Lombok, Indonesia. Masters by Research thesis, Murdoch University, 1996. https://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/id/eprint/53223/.

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This study was designed to evaluate various sources of disease data to determine those diseases affecting livestock (cattle, chickens, goats and pigs) on the islands of Bali and Lombok, Indonesia. A retrospective study was conducted comparing data collected from eight Poskeswans (Animal Health Posts), the Provincial Government Livestock Service (PGLS), and two laboratories (the provincial Disease Investigation Centre (DIC) in Bali and a smaller type B laboratory in Lombok). An abattoir survey was undertaken to identify the subclinical and parasitic diseases of cattle and pigs. Farmers from two villages were interviewed to determine routine management and husbandry procedures adopted. The relative importance of diseases in each of the data sources was determined by calculating proportional disease rates. Parasitic infections (helminthiasis, fascioliasis and coccidiosis) were the most common diseases of cattle, diagnosed in 21.8% of animals examined by field veterinarians, 18.3% of all submissions to the DIC and 9.7% of specimens submitted to the type B laboratory. Over half (57.4%) of the cattle examined at the abattoir were infected with gastrointestinal parasites, and cattle infected with Fasciola spp. were 2.7 times more likely to be in poor body condition than non-infected animals. Gastrointestinal parasites were also identified as major diseases in pigs and goats being diagnosed in 26.3% and 69.1% of submissions to the DIC, respectively. Over half (55%) of pigs examined at the abattoir showed previous evidence of infection with Ascaris suum and 39.7% had current parasitic infections. Although parasitic diseases were frequently diagnosed in cattle, pigs and goats, infectious diseases, such as Newcastle disease and infectious bursal disease, were diagnosed more commonly in chickens. Similarly the diseases recorded by the PGLS were primarily infectious in nature, and included diseases with the potential for high morbidity and mortality such as haemorrhagic septicaemia, bovine ephemeral fever and Newcastle disease. These diseases were less frequently reported in the field than other clinical and subclinical diseases. Gastrointestinal parasitism was not included in the diseases reported by the PGLS. Diseases diagnosed by the DIG generally required more technical input, such as involving serology, microbiology or detection of histopathological changes, than those identified by the staff of the type B laboratory. Many of the diseases commonly diagnosed by the type B laboratory were based on the presenting clinical signs described by the submitter. Diagnoses made by field veterinarians primarily relied on the presenting clinical signs, and those made at the abattoir were made based on the presence of pathognomonic pathological lesions or the detection of parasites. The livestock management and husbandry practices adopted by farmers in a village in Bali were different to those from a village in Lombok. Farmers from Bali were more likely to adopt disease control procedures and use the service of veterinarians than farmers from Lombok. More farmers from Bali reported sick goats and pigs, while sick cattle and chickens were more common in Lombok. Most clinical signs recognised by farmers were non-specific and the specific diseases affecting livestock in the villages could not be identified. It is concluded that data which is currently available, and data which can be easily collected from abattoirs, can be used to study the epidemiology of livestock diseases in Indonesia; however the accuracy of the diagnoses and the biases in the data sources must be carefully evaluated. Inclusion of data on the population at risk and host characteristics would significantly improve the value of this data. Parasitic diseases were recognised as important problems of livestock in Bali and Lombok, and these diseases are likely to have a greater impact on the animals’ productivity than are infectious diseases.
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Wangiyana, Wayan, University of Western Sydney, Faculty of Science and Technology, and School of Science. "Environmental regionalisation for the identification of potential legume production areas on Lombok Island using a geographic information system." 1994. http://handle.uws.edu.au:8081/1959.7/24186.

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In Lombok Island (Indonesia), the ratio of land area to population is already low, and is likely to decrease because of the increasing size of the human population. The management of land resources is, therefore, important, to ensure the wise and sustainable use of the available land in meeting population demands, especially for food. Geographic Information Systems (GIS) have been used successfully in resource management, and this area of their application has been a major driver in the development of GIS. Because agrosystems need to be tuned to the specific characteristics of regional environments, regionalisation is one way to improve agricultural production and the management of agrotechnology development. The identification of potential areas for growing soybean, peanut and common bean was conducted based on two tools: GIS analysis and the 30 group regionalisation. Both techniques have advantages and disadvantages. Using GIS, exact mapping of the potential category of each grid cell can be done, but it cannot be used to estimate the total humid periods and suitable planting times in a year. Using a regionalisation, these can be done, but only when purposes is suggested as more widely applicable than using GIS analysis. Both techniques have a role to play. Based on an initial validation of the techniques employed and the results obtained, further work is suggested, either for the optimum application of the results presently obtained or for the improvement of the techniques of analysis and thence the production of results for future use.
Master of Science (Hons)
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Books on the topic "Lombok (Island)"

1

Iain, Stewart, and Lonely Planet Publications (Firm), eds. Bali & Lombok. [Footscray, Vic: Lonely Planet Publications, 2011.

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Thomasson-Croll, Mary Justice. Bali & Lombok. Hoboken, N.J: Frommer's, 2009.

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Lin-Liu, Jen. Frommer's Bali & Lombok. 2nd ed. Hoboken, NJ: Wiley Pub., 2012.

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Supratno, Haris. Wayang Sasak di Pulau Lombok: Studi kasus cerita Dewi Rengganis = Wayang Sasak in Lombok Island : a case study on Dewi Rengganis story. [Surabaya]: Departemen Pendidikan dan Kebudayaan, Institut Keguruan dan Ilmu Pendidikan Surabaya, Lembaga Penelitian, 1994.

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Basuki, Prayitno. Kajian terhadap kandungan lokal industri pariwisata di Pulau Lombok: Laporan penelitian = The investigation of local content of tourism industry in Lombok Island. [Mataram]: Departemen Pendidikan dan Kebudayaan, Universitas Mataram, Fakultas Ekonomi, 1996.

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Between harmony and discrimination: Negotiating religious identities within majority-minority relationships in Bali and Lombok. Leiden: Brill, 2014.

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Zuhdi, Muhammad Harfin. Lombok mirah Sasak Adi: Sejarah sosial, Islam, budaya, politik & ekonomi Lombok. Pisangan, Ciputat: Imsak Press, 2011.

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Jamaluddin. Sejarah sosial Islam di Lombok tahun 1740-1935: Studi kasus terhadap tuan guru. [Jakarta]: Kementerian Agama RI, Badan Litbang dan Diklat, Puslitbang Lektur dan Khazanah Keagamaan, 2011.

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Hägerdal, Hans. Hindu rulers, Muslim subjects: Lombok and Bali in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Bangkok, Thailand: White Lotus Press, 2001.

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Mark, Hampton. Tourism and the environment in small islands: A case study of Gili Trawangan, Lombok, Indonesia. Portsmouth: University of Portsmouth, 1998.

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Book chapters on the topic "Lombok (Island)"

1

Yukni, Arifianti, Teerarungsigul Suree, Cita Akbar, Kuehn Friedrich, and Fuchs Michael. "Landslide Susceptibility Assessment Based on Remote Sensing and GIS in Lombok Island of Indonesia." In Landslide Science for a Safer Geoenvironment, 305–11. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-05050-8_48.

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Anshori, Furqon, Soenarto, and Didik Rohmantoro. "A Preliminary Study: Analysis of the Digital Competence of Vocational Students on the Island of Lombok." In Proceedings of the 1st UPY International Conference on Education and Social Science (UPINCESS 2022), 166–73. Paris: Atlantis Press SARL, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/978-2-494069-39-8_15.

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Agustawijaya, Didi S., Ria R. Marlaningtyas, Suryawan Murtiadi, Mudji Wahyudi, Muhajirah, Hartana, and Ausa R. Agustawijaya. "Application of the Updated PSHA on the Stability Analysis of the Meninting Diversion-Spillway Tunnel in Lombok Island—Indonesia." In Proceedings of the 5th International Conference on Rehabilitation and Maintenance in Civil Engineering, 129–39. Singapore: Springer Nature Singapore, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-16-9348-9_12.

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Smith, Bianca J. "Women, Education and the Pious Feminine in Nahdlatul Wathan, East Lombok." In Islam, Education and Radicalism in Indonesia, 87–114. London: Routledge, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003269229-6.

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Hägerdal, Hans. "The Bugis-Makassar Seafarers." In Piracy in World History. Nieuwe Prinsengracht 89 1018 VR Amsterdam Nederland: Amsterdam University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5117/9789463729215_ch05.

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The essay focuses on Bugis and Makassar seafarers of South Sulawesi through two cases. The first is Lombok and Sumbawa in the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries, where landless Makassarese aristocrats fought or allied with various groups to create a political platform. The second case is the seascape around Timor, further to the east, where a socially different type of maritime enterprise evolved, entailing both commercial activities and raiding of vulnerable small-scale island societies. While Dutch writers termed all these seafarers “pirates,” this fails to capture the range of their socio-political roles. Moreover, the study demonstrates how the Dutch East India Company contributed to the rise of piratical activity through colonial advances on Sulawesi in the 1660s.
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"Notonyx Guinotae, A New Species Of Goneplacid Crab (Brachyura, Goneplacidae) From Lombok Island, Indonesia." In Studies on Brachyura: a Homage to Danièle Guinot, 269–78. BRILL, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/ej.9789004170865.i-366.164.

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Butt, Leslie. "Beyond the government document." In The Anthropological Demography of Health, 204–24. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198862437.003.0007.

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In response to global initiatives, Indonesia has increased efforts to register all children at birth. Birth registration has a core goal to transform the act of childbirth into a legal statement about the obligations and entitlements of belonging to a nation-state. Drawing upon a multi-method exploratory study conducted in 2014 in four low-income, high out-migration Sasak communities in East Lombok, this chapter discusses childbirth and birth registration practices in families where the mother or father leave the island for extended periods of low-skill, temporary work. Migration, Sasak pregnancy practices, state childbirth management, and the meaning of documents become bound up with procedures by which the state seeks to align kin and other local relatedness in conformity with membership in the state. Despite the institutionalization of midwives as agents of birth registration, the limited success of state efforts to register children is evident in the ways that migrant families navigate, circumvent, ignore, and selectively exploit the official system, thereby supporting their priorities around work and family. The implications of these patterns for Indonesian birth registration goals are noted.
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Mashur. "Strategy for Improving the Management of Feed and Drinking Water for Smallholders Livestock Based on Sustainability Status in Lombok Island, Indonesia." In Current Research in Agriculture and Veterinary Sciences Vol. 3, 52–67. Book Publisher International (a part of SCIENCEDOMAIN International), 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.9734/bpi/cravs/v3/8097d.

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Verstappen, Herman Th. "Volcanic Islands." In The Physical Geography of Southeast Asia. Oxford University Press, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199248025.003.0020.

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Volcanism is of widespread occurrence in the tectonically active zones of Southeast Asia. It is a dominant feature in many (particularly smaller) islands where other landform types are absent or scarce. The geographic distribution, major landform types, exogenous and endogenous processes, resources, and hazards of southeast Asian volcanic environments are discussed, first in general terms, and thereafter by using the examples of two typical volcanic islands, Bali and Lombok (Indonesia), which also illustrate the interaction between tectonism and volcanism in this part of the world. The distribution pattern of volcanism in Southeast Asia is related to plate tectonics, as discussed in Chapter 1. Three major plates dominate the region: the Eurasian, Indo-Australian, and Pacific, each of which is composed of several sub-plates. They meet at a triple point situated south of the Bird’s Head of Papua. Volcanism develops where, at some distance from the deep sea trenches that mark subduction zones, the subducting material melts and the magma rises to the surface. Volcanic geanticlinal belts, known as volcanic arcs and stretching parallel to the subduction zones, are thus formed. The arcs are often affected by transcurrent or compartmental faulting, and their roofs may collapse in places. The activity of individual volcanoes comes to an end when the magma chambers concerned are emptied or become inactive otherwise. Volcanism becomes extinct in (part of ) a volcanic arc when subduction abates. It may shift in position with changes in the configurations of the related subduction zone and plates. The plates, subduction zones, and the location of the volcanoes in Southeast Asia are shown in Figure 1.1. All volcanoes discussed in this chapter are Quaternary volcanoes in the sense that the oldest and most eroded ones ended their activity in the Lower Quaternary. The volcanism is of the intermediate andesite–basaltic Circum-Pacific suite, but locally more acidic rocks (rhyolites, dacites, etc.) occur. Neogene volcanic materials, intercalated with marine strata, are common, particularly in the flanks of the volcanic arcs of the region. Volcanic rocks, dating from Cretaceous and older geological periods and related to Pre-Tertiary subduction patterns, occur in Peninsular Malaysia, Borneo, and other areas outside the present arcs.
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Zackhras, Carlon. "Ewi am lomnak." In Indigenous Pacific Islander Eco-Literatures, 303. University of Hawaii Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9780824893514-108.

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Conference papers on the topic "Lombok (Island)"

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Ningrum, Endar Widiah, and Mufti Petala Patria. "Ingestion of microplastics by anchovies from east Lombok Harbour, Lombok Island, Indonesia." In INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON BIOLOGY AND APPLIED SCIENCE (ICOBAS). AIP Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.5115640.

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Ekawasti, Fitrine, April H. Wardhana, D. H. Sawitri, Dias A. Dewi, and R. A. Akbari. "Serological Test for Surra Cases in Lombok Island." In Proceedings of International Seminar on Livestock Production and Veterinary Technology. Indonesian Center for Animal Research and Development (ICARD), 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.14334/proc.intsem.lpvt-2016-p.183-190.

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Wekadigunawan, C., and Rahmah Amin. "Environmental Factors on Infant Feeding Practices in Lombok Island – Indonesia." In 1st International Conference on Health. SCITEPRESS - Science and Technology Publications, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.5220/0009581101790183.

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Syamsuri, Fajar Aswadi, and Heru Sufianto. "Earthquake-Resistant Design Principles of the Traditional House in Lombok Island." In International International Conference of Heritage & Culture in Integrated Rural-Urban Context (HUNIAN 2019). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/aer.k.200729.006.

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Wardhani, Aditya. "The Vitality of the Malayu Language on the Island of Lombok." In International Congress of Indonesian Linguistics Society (KIMLI 2021). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/assehr.k.211226.058.

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Irwansah, Sugiyarto, and Edwi Mahajoeno. "Mangrove diversity in the Serewe Gulf of Lombok Island West Nusa Tenggara." In THE 4TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON RESEARCH, IMPLEMENTATION, AND EDUCATION OF MATHEMATICS AND SCIENCE (4TH ICRIEMS): Research and Education for Developing Scientific Attitude in Sciences And Mathematics. Author(s), 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4995197.

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Syafruddin, S., Hairil Wadi, R. Rispawati, S. Suud, and Ni Made Novi Suryanti. "Child Labor Exploitation in the Tourism Industry on the Island of Lombok." In 2nd Annual Conference on Education and Social Science (ACCESS 2020). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/assehr.k.210525.061.

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Sarifudin, Moh, and Baiq Wardhani. "Global Demands, Local Response: Tourism and Indigenous Capitalism in Bayan, Lombok Island." In Unhas International Conference on Social and Political Science (UICoSP 2017). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/uicosp-17.2017.14.

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Diva Mustika, Alyssa, Rizky Rahmani, Nanang Hariyanto, and Muhammad Nurdin. "Optimized operation scheme of on-grid PV farm to grid case : Lombok Island." In 2017 International Conference on High-Voltage Engineering and Power Systems (ICHVEPS). IEEE, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/ichveps.2017.8225959.

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Prasedya, Eka Sunarwidhi, Ni Wayan Riyani Martyasari, Rizkia Apriani, Sipti Mayshara, Rizka Azzahral Fanani, and Haji Sunarpi. "Antioxidant activity of Ulva lactuca L. from different coastal locations of Lombok Island, Indonesia." In PROCEEDINGS OF THE 2ND INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON BIOSCIENCE, BIOTECHNOLOGY, AND BIOMETRICS 2019. AIP Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.5141281.

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