You can do some of it yourself, but unfortunately an app cannot itself achieve comparable functionality to a lot of the job scheduler API. The problem is that monitoring several of the execution criteria that the job scheduler provides (notably charging state, device idleness, and connectivity) would require that your app be running constantly just to receive the broadcasts about those states -- and the performance cost of running constantly will outweigh the other benefits even if your app is the only one doing it. If every app is trying to run continuously to do the same kind of monitoring, the user's experience is going to be terrible.
The closest you can come in a reasonable way by yourself is to run a service "occasionally" to check the constraints you're interested in, and back off and retry later if they don't hold at the time you check. You need to be careful about how you're scheduling things, too -- in particular, if you're going to be using the network you need to be extremely careful that you are not accidentally causing lots of devices to hit the network at the same time. Cell carriers get very unhappy if they see simultaneous traffic from your app from every device on their network. Also, remember to avoid exact alarms if at all possible, so that the OS has leeway to batch your app's work together with others'.
Device-idle / user activity is hard for your app to track by itself, unfortunately, but connectivity and charge state are readily available.
A final tool at your disposal is the Sync Manager, which requires more infrastructure to use but does offer some reasonably powerful scheduling facilities, especially around connectivity requirements.