
Building Community Resilience: A Study of Gorkha Reconstruction Initiatives
Author(s) -
Nirmal Chongbang,
Devraj Bharadwaj
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
molung educational frontier
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2542-2596
DOI - 10.3126/mef.v11i0.37849
Subject(s) - resilience (materials science) , community resilience , psychological resilience , focus group , state (computer science) , rural community , socioeconomics , geography , field research , qualitative research , field (mathematics) , sociology , political science , economic growth , environmental resource management , social science , psychology , engineering , social psychology , economics , physics , algorithm , redundancy (engineering) , anthropology , computer science , reliability engineering , thermodynamics , mathematics , pure mathematics
This article is based on the major findings of a field study recently conducted in Gandaki Rural Municipality of Gorkha district after the 2015 earthquake with its epicentre at Barpak of the same district, which quaked the region of northern midhills of Nepal. The study examined how far neighbouring households, community organizations, and state agencies contributed to building community resilience in this earthquake affected area. More specifically, it investigated into the efficacy of reaconstruction initiatives to provide relief to the earthquake victims for their recovery. To explore the issue, mixed-method approach of both quantitative and qualitative research was applied. Primary data were collected from the stakeholders through questionnaires and focus group discussions. The convenience sampling method was used to select 116 households from Ward No. 1 of the Municipality. The findings of the research indicate that contribution towards building community resilience was the highest from the neighbouring households followed by community organizations whereas the least contribution was from the state agencies. We found that community resilience practice in the area has not been as effective as expected. So collective and coordinated effort is necessary for building community resilience.