Journal of Regional and Rural Development Planning
Vol. 6 No. 1 (2022): Journal of Regional and Rural Development Planning (Jurnal Perencanaan Pembangu

Perkembangan dan Karakterisasi Desa-desa Pegunungan Jawa Tengah: Development and Characterization of Mountain Villages in Central Java

Andi Yoga Saputra (Magister Ilmu Perencanaan Pembangunan Wilayah dan Perdesaan, Sekolah Pascasarjana, IPB University, Kampus IPB Dramaga, Bogor 16680, Indonesia
Pusat Pengkajian Perencanaan dan Pengembangan Wilayah, IPB University, Kampus IPB Baranang Siang, Bogor 161)

Ernan Rustiadi (Pusat Pengkajian Perencanaan dan Pengembangan Wilayah, IPB University, Kampus IPB Baranang Siang, Bogor 16127, Indonesia
Divisi Perencanaan Pengembangan Wilayah, Departemen Ilmu Tanah dan Sumberdaya Lahan, Fakultas Pertanian, IPB University, Kampus )

Wiwiek Rindayati (Departemen Ilmu Ekonomi, Fakultas Ekonomi dan Manajemen, IPB University, Kampus IPB Dramaga, Bogor 16680, Indonesia)



Article Info

Publish Date
04 Feb 2022

Abstract

The characteristics of mountain villages are very different from valley villages and plain villages, but socio-economically and environmentally related to each other. This study aims to analyze the level of development of physical facilities in mountain villages, analyze the village development index based on the dimensions of village development, and analyze the components of socio-economic, environmental, and developmental characteristics of mountainous villages in Central Java. Analysis of the level of development of mountainous village physical facilities used skalogram based on PODES 2018 data, village development index based on the dimensions of village development used the Village Index (ID) calculation formula, and analysis of the characteristics of the socio-economic, environmental, and developmental components of mountain villages used Principal Component Analysis (PCA). Results of the analysis of the level of development of the physical facilities of the mountainous villages show that 413 villages (67.81%) of the mountains are in the third hierarchical class (less developed). The category of village development based on the dimensions of development shows that mountain villages are included in the category of developing villages with an average value of ID 54.17. The components that best characterize the characteristics of mountainous villages are the potential for the danger of 21.9%, the availability of secondary school education facilities, health facilities, and the village development level of 16%, the component of trade facilities 5.8. %, the component of the availability of the micro-industry is 13.25%, and the component of the availability of health facilities are 8.8%.

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Journal Info

Abbrev

p2wd

Publisher

Subject

Humanities Civil Engineering, Building, Construction & Architecture Economics, Econometrics & Finance Environmental Science Social Sciences

Description

JP2WD covers topics related to regional science, regional and/or rural planning, regional economics, spatial and environmental planning, regional information system, community development, and public policy. Emphasis are placed on issues related to rural development in developing and middle-income ...