UNAIR, UTM collaboration improves Ecotourism in Sungai Melayu, Malaysia

Universitas Airlangga has once again shown its commitment to becoming a higher education institution with contribution and impact on society. This commitment is displayed not only in Indonesia but also to the world. This time, UNAIR collaborated with Universiti Teknologi Malaysia (UTM) to hold a community service activity in Kampong Sungai Melayu, Johor, Malaysia, on Saturday, August 26, 2023.

International community service pioneer

UNAIR initiated the establishment of the World University Association for Community Development ( WUACD ) in 2018 to strengthen collaboration between higher education institutions to improve the quality of community service activities, both in Indonesia and other countries. This time, WUACD UNAIR designed a collaborative community service program with UTM targeting communities along Sungai Melayu, in Johor, Malaysia.

This activity involved 21 experts from UNAIR who visited Kampong Sungai Melayu and shared innovative ideas for developing sustainable ecotourism in Sungai Melayu. The activity was coordinated by Edi Dwi Riyanto, PhD from the Faculty of Humanities, and attended by the Vice Rector for Research, Innovation, and Community Empowerment, Prof. Dr. Ni Nyoman Tri Puspaningsih.

Encouraging collaboration of cognate countries

YB Datuk Pandak bin Ahmad, one of the representatives of the Kampong Sungai Melayu community, welcomed UNAIR delegates warmly. He is an Iskandar City People’s Representative Council member and an alumnus of UTM.

“We are very proud to welcome guests from Universitas Airlangga, because Indonesia and Malaysia are cognate countries. We should work together and collaborate,” he said during the opening speech.

Prof. Nyoman delivered her remarks as a representative from UNAIR. She said UNAIR academics are ready to devote their expertise for mutual benefit, not only for the people of Indonesia but also for the global community, which in this case are the residents of Kampong Sungai Melayu in Malaysia.

“UNAIR is committed to becoming a university that contributes and gives an impact to the world,” said Prof. Nyoman.

Supporting Sustainable Development Goals

In addition to achieving the 17th goal of SDGs, Partnership for the Goals, this community service activity also supports achieving two other goals: the 11th goal, Sustainable Cities and Communities and the 14th goal about Life Below Water. In the knowledge-sharing session,  Dr. Veryl Hasan SPi MP strengthened the achievement of the 14th goal of SDGs. He is one of UNAIR experts in Fisheries and Marine Sciences. Then, it continued with a discussion between representatives of UNAIR, UTM, and the people of Kampong Sungai Melayu. (*)

Anargya ITS Successfully Secures Champion Title at FSAE Japan 2023

The Formula Society of Automotive Engineers (FSAE) Japan is an annual international electric car competition that challenges students to design and produce a single-passenger car resembling a formula racing car. This year’s FSAE Japan competition featured 62 teams from various world-class universities in China, Taiwan, Bangladesh, Thailand, Indonesia, and the host country, Japan. For this year, Anargya ITS was the only team representing Indonesia.

The General Manager of Team Anargya ITS, Rafif Herdian Noor, revealed that there were two categories in this international competition: Static Event and Dynamic Event. Anargya ITS Team achieved 3rd place in the Business Plan Presentation and also received the 3rd place award for the View Drawing category. ” We put in tremendous effort to visualize every aspect of the business plan and the view drawing for the latest version of the Anargya car,” he said.

In response to their victory, Rafif, a third-year Industrial Mechanical Engineering student at ITS, acknowledged that their success was driven by innovation. Anargya Team ITS made several improvements from the previous electric car, one of which was changing the material of the car body to carbon fiber. “This material change can reduce the car’s mass by up to 38 percent,” Rafif explained. Furthermore, innovation was also achieved by incorporating components made by the Anargya team themselves, including batteries assembled according to international regulations. These batteries have fire-resistant capabilities, making them safer in emergency situations. The team also equipped the car with an air-cooling system that flows through the side pods, thus increasing battery efficiency and durability. Additionally, the battery capacity was increased to 7.46 kilowatt-hours.

Rafif expressed his gratitude to ITS for its significant contributions to Anargya Team, enabling them to continue making an impact with this support. The material and moral assistance from ITS played a vital role in Anargya’s success during the past year of preparation. “In the future, Anargya will continue to strive to give its best for ITS,” he said optimistically.

Chula Joins the Move for Economic Advancement with Thai Soft Power through Research, Innovations

Chula Marketing professor draws attention to Chula’s readiness to drive research and social innovation to create the leaders of the future and drive Thai soft power to the global society.

Thai soft power is trending at the moment. “Lisa BlackPink wore a traditional Thai skirt while visiting the temples in Ayutthaya, and sent the demand for Thai textiles to skyrocket around the world. This Thai soft power trend helped revive the Thai economy and tourism after the great slump of the COVID-19 pandemic (2020-2022) during which the number of tourists declined by more than a hundredfold. Yet, in 2023, tourism has swung back to 80 percent growth, and more than 30 million foreign tourists are expected to visit Thailand.

Asst. Prof. Dr. Ake Pattaratanakun, Chula’s Chief Brand Officer, Head of the Marketing Department, at Chulalongkorn Business School, and Board member of the Office of Creative Economy Agency (CEA) (Public Organization), which is responsible for overseeing Thailand’s soft power promotion, discusses the strengths of Thai Soft Power and Chula’s stance to drive it.

Thai Soft Power has many dimensions. The Tourism Authority of Thailand (TAT) divides Thai Soft Power into 5Fs: 1) Food, 2) Festival, 3) Fighting – Martial Arts, 4) Fashion – Thai Fabric and Fashion Design, and 5) Film. Meanwhile, the study “Thai Soft Power” by the Kellogg School of Management, Northwestern University conducted among 50 worldwide corporate executives with previous interaction with Thai people and Thai organizations, revealed a perspective on Thai soft power in 5 attributes or 5Fs: 1) Fun, 2) Flavoring, 3) Fulfilling, 4) Flexibility, and 5) Friendliness.

As a leading educational institution in Thailand, Chulalongkorn University plays a crucial role in the development of leaders who will drive Thai soft power through programs of various faculties, such as the Faculties of Fine and Applied Arts, Education, Architecture, and Arts, to name a few. In addition, Chula also offers specific programs to build the soft power knowledge base, such as the long-standing Graduate School’s master’s degree program in Cultural Management.

Examples of Chula projects related to soft power in the areas of language, arts, culture, tourism, economy, and business, are as follows:

• Insight Wat Pho Application for tourism at Wat Pho
• Creative Luk Thung (Folk Music): Thai Soft Power Going Global Project
• Thai Language Courses for Foreigners
• TV Drama Innovation Project for the Promotion of Cultural Industry 4.0
• Model research to develop a full range of woven textile culture capital, from creating innovative textile fibers and designing fashion and lifestyle products to upgrading local brands to internationalization, promoting the creative economy and developing creative tourism, supporting sustainable communities.
• The Chula Art Park project
• The Top Corporate Brand Success Valuation Research

“These are what Chula has carried out to drive Thai soft power. We have created the future leaders for soft power and will continue to do so to grow the Thai economy sustainably,” Asst. Prof. Dr. Ake concluded.

Read more at https://www.chula.ac.th/en/highlight/133305/

Lingnan University’s vision for the future of the liberal arts

Lingnan University (Lingnan) is the innovative home of the liberal arts in Hong Kong. As part of Times Higher Education’s Connect Research Stories series, six of Lingnan’s leading figures described how the university is building on both its traditional values, and the possibilities of digital technology, to create exciting pathways for both staff and students.

“We are in a great position to venture and lead with our liberal arts education model,” noted Lingnan President Professor S. Joe Qin. This model, he said, is based on whole-person education, or boya in Chinese. Given Hong Kong’s status as a world city, Prof Qin wants to see Lingnan at the forefront of the merging of Eastern and Western aspects of liberal arts education.

Pun Ngai is chair professor, and head, of the Department of Cultural Studies at Lingnan. “Students come to cultural studies because they would like to pursue creativity,” she explained. “Through cultural commons, through social innovation, through creativity, we can really generate different forms of community projects.”

Prof Pun’s department created its i-COMMON platform to connect with more than 30 community partners engaged in activities such as social enterprises and organic farming.

Lingnan’s Science Unit also values collaboration with local communities, as well as its interaction with faculty from other disciplines. “It’s important to us to show that we’re doing something of worth,” said the Science Unit’s Professor Jonathan Fong.

Prof Fong explained that when conducting research – for example, into changes in Hong Kong’s air pollution – it was necessary to ask, ‘What does this mean to the general public?’, and can the work be used to influence public policy and make a positive impact on society.

William Hayward, chair professor of psychology and dean, Faculty of Social Sciences, pointed out that his faculty actively engage with not only Lingnan’s many international partners, but also with the surrounding community in Hong Kong’s socially deprived North West New Territories.

The possibilities of digital technology and data science offer new tools for this work, Prof Hayward said. “And that requires us to be interdisciplinary, to work with data scientists and to bring people in who have expertise in AI, social computation, and so forth.”

Professor William Liu Guanglin, of Lingnan’s Department of History, grew up on the Mainland as Deng Xiaoping’s economic reforms were transforming China, and this experience, he said, has shaped his outlook.

“Economic history is basically an interdisciplinary subject between history and economics,” Prof Liu explained. He added that it is both fascinating and challenging to reconcile the very different methodologies used in each subject.

Yau Yung is a professor of urban studies in Lingnan’s School of Graduate Studies. As an example of the ways in which his team aims to create real-world impact and help realise a more sustainable future, Professor Yau cited its work to help end unsafe and inadequate housing in Hong Kong.

“The city’s poorest have no choice but living in subdivided flats.” These are tiny, many have no natural light, and sometimes cooking, toilet and sleeping spaces are all in the same cubicle.

Please click here to view the video series.