Article

ANALYSIS OF CLOTHING MANUFACTURERS OF HALAL PRODUCTS IN THE CLOTHING INDUSTRY, (STUDY ON CLOTHING PRODUCERS IN THE CITY OF MATARAM)

Authors:
  • Universitas Islam Negeri Mataram
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Abstract

Halal clothing is one part of the halal industry that is targeted to be developed in Indonesia, given the considerable potential needed such as other halal industrial sectors more than Islamic finance, halal food, halal cosmetics, and halal tourism. Unlike the Islamic finance and halal food industries, knowledge of halal clothing in the community is still very low. Expect limited halal-haram limited only to food and financial problems. This is a challenge in the development of the halal clothing industry in Indonesia.The objectives of this study include 1) To analyze the clothing manufacturer's knowledge of the concept of halal clothing based on the supply chain; 2) To analyze the process of producing clothes and analyze the concept of halal clothing; 3) The views of clothing manufacturers on the concept of halal clothing. The research method in this research is descriptive qualitative. The technique of collecting data using interviews and observations, while to restore the validity of the data using triangulation techniques. The research subjects in this study were the clothing manufacturers in the city of Mataram.1) Knowledge of clothing producers about the concept of halal clothing 2) the production process and SOP that are carried out by producers are still very simple, this changes the producers do not have the readiness to carry out the production process based on the concept of halal clothing based on the supply chain; 3) According to the producers voluntary to meet the indicators on halal clothing based on the supply chain. According to the producers, the first aspects that are difficult to agree to include: 1) procurement of halal raw materials; 2) halal warehousing; and 3) SOP for halal clothing.

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... Based on previous research that has been conducted on the halal value chain and the implementation of HCCP (Amir & TjibtoSubroto, 2019;Fajri, 2020;Hanafi, 2019;Kohilavani et al., 2015;Muflihin, 2019;Nurainun et al., 2021), we can be seen that the implementation of HCCP is generally carried out in the food and slaughterhouse industries, while in the textile industry there has been no previous research to implement HCCP. Textile companies can currently fulfill the obligation of the textile industry to be labeled halal by implementing a halal value chain in the company through the implementation of the HCCP system to identify haram elements. ...
... Muflihin (2019) stated that halal fashion has four indicators: halal suppliers, halal manufacturing, halal warehouses, halal distribution, and halal transportation. Hanafi (2019) stated that the difficulty in meeting the criteria for halal fashion is due to limited raw materials, SOPs, and halal warehousing. Fajri (2020) said that Halal-HACCP integrates food safety and halal assurance systems; the opportunity to implement this system is quite significant in other industries due to the increasing halal industry development. ...
... Frameworks for other industries besides textiles are presented by Lestari et al., (2023), (Ngah et al., 2017, (Khan et al., 2021), and (Vanany et al., 2021). Research on halal fashion/textiles has not provided a framework like the one produced by this study (Hanafi, 2019;Ikhsanti et al., 2023;Kadir, 2023;Listyadewi, 2023;Muflihin, 2019). ...
Article
This paper aims to apply the halal value chain to Tanah Liek Batik textiles to become halal batik products, using a framework designed to analyze the halal value chain. The method used in dealing with this problem is to apply HCCP (Halal Critical Control Point) to the company's activity value chain to become a halal value chain. The initial data used is a flow diagram of the production process of four types of Tanah Liek Batik products: Tanah Liek dyed batik, chemically dyed batik, stamped batik with soil-like dye, and chemically dyed batik. Based on the results of the identification of haram materials in each process in the activity, the Halal Control Point (HCP) is obtained. The application of HCCP to the Tanah Liek Batik value chain has 13 critical points of haram products, which come from the process, facilities, and tools and materials used during the production process. This study also produces a Halal Value Chain framework in the Textile Industry. Applying this framework in the textile industry is expected to increase the number of halal-certified textile industries.
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