#Peer Review: Legal Certainty Of Mining Management After The Enactment Of Indonesian Law On Local Government No. 23 Of 2014
Abstract
: The purpose of this research is to find out and analyze the legal certainty of mining
management after the statement of Indonesian law on local government No. 23 of 2014 in
East Kalimantan. The research process used several steps called the normative legal research
with descriptive analytic approach. The study was conducted in East Kalimantan Province in
three research locations in the Kutai Kartanegara Regency represented by the PT. Anugera
Bara Kaltim, PT. Indominco (East Kutai), PT. Nuansa Cipta Coal (Samarinda), Department
of Mining and Energy of the Province of East Kalimantan (this was the term they used in
2017, now it is called the Department of Energy and Mineral Resources) as respondents to
the Head of Department and Mining Inspector. The approach the researcher had taken was
Purposive Sampling, with the following considerations: that the Head of Department
understands the policies that should be implemented as a form of implementing regulations,
and is implementing the policies from the center to the regions. The variables in this study
which included indicators as part of scientific tracking efforts that would be described and
analyzed by using the philosophical approach to determine the impact of government policies
on the mining sector. The conceptual approach is an approach which moved by views and
doctrines that have been developed in the science of law so that new ideas and principles that
are relevant to the problem in a study can be found.
The result of this research showed the effect of the legal certainty in mining management in
East Kalimantan which was to revoke the role of district and city governments in mining
management. The revocation of the role of local government had a negative impact,
especially in good mining management. Good mining is certainly based on the principles of
good mining practice, this condition was greatly influenced by a Good Governance system.
In addition, many illegal mines were found in regencies and cities because the regulatory
conditions that organized the authority of district / city governments had shifted to the Central
Government and was implemented in the Provincial Government. As a result, illegal mining
increased and the impact of not giving the authority to the local government seemingly
viewed as an omission because the central and provincial governments were not aware of the
incident immediately.
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- J - Law [721]