Proceedings of the 1st International Conference on Law, Social Science, Economics, and Education, ICLSSEE 2021, March 6th 2021, Jakarta, Indonesia

Research Article

Bailiffs’ Training Needs Analysis for Supporting The Digitalization of Judicial Processes in Indonesia in The Pandemic Era

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  • @INPROCEEDINGS{10.4108/eai.6-3-2021.2305958,
        author={Zulfia Hanum Alfi Syahr and Muhamad Zaky Albana},
        title={Bailiffs’ Training Needs Analysis for Supporting  The Digitalization of Judicial Processes in  Indonesia in The Pandemic Era},
        proceedings={Proceedings of the 1st International Conference on Law, Social Science, Economics, and Education, ICLSSEE  2021, March 6th 2021, Jakarta, Indonesia},
        publisher={EAI},
        proceedings_a={ICLSSEE},
        year={2021},
        month={5},
        keywords={bailiffs; competence; training needs analysis},
        doi={10.4108/eai.6-3-2021.2305958}
    }
    
  • Zulfia Hanum Alfi Syahr
    Muhamad Zaky Albana
    Year: 2021
    Bailiffs’ Training Needs Analysis for Supporting The Digitalization of Judicial Processes in Indonesia in The Pandemic Era
    ICLSSEE
    EAI
    DOI: 10.4108/eai.6-3-2021.2305958
Zulfia Hanum Alfi Syahr1,*, Muhamad Zaky Albana1
  • 1: Law and Justice Research and Development Center the Supreme Court of the Republic of Indonesia, Jalan Jend. Ahmad Yani Kav.58 bypass Cempaka Putih, Jakarta Pusat
*Contact email: qvia.alfisyahr@gmail.com

Abstract

Bailiffs are part of the judicial apparatus who have the task of executing decisions. The execution is vital to enforce the law for people who seek justice; however, during the Covid-19 pandemic, many executions must be delayed and switched by implementing virtual applications. Bailiffs faced many problems in adapting to a virtual task since there is no training to use these judicial applications. This paper's focussed issue is training needs analysis for bailiffs to do execution in the current pandemic era. The goal is to improve the competence of bailiffs as judicial apparatus. The method used was quantitative using a survey distributed to bailiffs in general, religion and state administrative court. The result was that bailiffs needed the training to improve their competence, especially using court applications and psychological and mass negotiation skills.