Gave Public lecture at FH Unram; Rieke Diah Pitaloka encouraged the Precision State Data Law.
Mataram, Universitas Mataram –
In line with the 56th Anniversary of the Faculty of Law, Universitas Mataram (FH Unram), FH Unram presented Dr. Rieke Diah Pitaloka and Dr. Sofyan Sjaf in a public lecture entitled The Urgency of Legal Products to Give Birth to Precise State Data. This public lecture was successfully held on Wednesday, November 30, at the Dome Building, Universitas Mataram.
The Dean of FH Unram, Dr. Hirsanuddin, S.H., M.Hum., welcomed the arrival of the members of Commission IV of the House of Representatives of the Republic of Indonesia. The Dean said that something that is currently being pursued is related to legal products, such as government regulations as a legal basis for Precision Rural Village Data (DDP).
“The Faculty of Law Unram will fully support and is ready to be a pioneer in supporting the program,” said the Dean.
Rector of Unram, Prof. Ir. Bambang Hari Kusumo, M.Agr, St., Ph.D., hoped that the PDD method presented by Dr. Rieke and Dr. Sofyan can be applied to villages in West Nusa Tenggara “Later, Unram can cooperate with legislators as the frontline in realizing the priority programs initiated,” said prof. Bambang when asked to give a speech.
Dr. Sofyan Sjaf, Vice Chairman of LPPM IPB University, was present as the opening speaker, revealing that the digital era and technological advances are momentum and instruments to realize accurate data. This Precision Village Data (DPP), he continued, is in accordance with the mandate of the founding father (founder of the nation) that national development can only be done through democratic rural development and accurate data.
“As a result, the Precision Village Data Project, or DDP, is presented as both a synthesis and an improvement of the existing data collection system,” he explained.
More than 300 Unram students and academics attended the public lecture. This female politician from West Java, who is a member of the Indonesian House of Representatives Commission IV, called for the “Eradicate State Data Syndicate” movement. For her, NTB has very good potential.
“I think the struggle to maintain and strengthen the faculty and vocational programs at NTB is a historical task that we must complete together,” she explained.
Meanwhile, Rieke Diah Pitaloka, the woman who was listed as the Most Powerful Woman by Asia Globe, explained her views on Pancasila as the basis of state ideology. “For me, Pancasila is not divided into nationalist and non-nationalist groups. Pancasila for the founders of this nation was not to divide the people into two camps: radical or non-radical. “I internalize Pancasila as a spiritual journey,” he said to all Unram students and academics. “Behind the numbers in the state data, there are the fates and lives of millions of people at stake,” he concluded at the Public Lecture on the Urgency of Legal Products to Give Birth to Precise State Data.