
Community resilience to face flood disaster in the Baleendah Village, Bandung Regency, Indonesia
Author(s) -
F S Nurwulandari,
G A Rismana
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
iop conference series. earth and environmental science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1755-1307
pISSN - 1755-1315
DOI - 10.1088/1755-1315/737/1/012051
Subject(s) - community resilience , resilience (materials science) , flood myth , vulnerability (computing) , sanitation , preparedness , thematic analysis , emergency management , socioeconomics , geography , environmental planning , environmental resource management , qualitative research , business , sociology , economic growth , computer science , computer security , political science , engineering , social science , resource (disambiguation) , economics , computer network , physics , archaeology , environmental engineering , law , thermodynamics
This study aims to determine the level of resilience of the people of Baleendah Village in dealing with floods. This research uses a holistic approach that considers all aspects as a whole. The approach known as mixed research methods. The mixed research method strategy used is concurrent triangulation strategy, where researchers collect qualitative and quantitative data together, then compare the two data to find out the difference or a combination. The community resilience variable used in this study refers to guidelines for measuring disaster resilience issued by GOAL (2015) that has 30 variables that are grouped into 5 thematic areas. These variables include knowledge and education; emergency preparedness and response; and risk management and vulnerability reduction. Based on the analysis of 3 variables and 10 aspects of community resilience, it can be concluded that the Baleendah Village community currently has a resilience level at the “RESILIENT” level, which means that the community can adapt and have a solution to overcome the floods. Based on the study findings, there are two main problems in increasing the resilience of the Baleendah Village community, namely access to financial assistance for people who are economically in the low income community category, and sanitation.