| Literature DB >> 29955269 |
Jonatan A Lassa1, Yos Boli2, Yulius Nakmofa3, Silvia Fanggidae4, Alex Ofong3,5, Herman Leonis3.
Abstract
Academics and practitioners often argue indirectly that all the roads to community resilience should be paved with community-based disaster risk reduction (CBDRR) approach. Community-based approach to resilience building has been a discursive material that appeals many disaster management players including international donors, non-governmental organisations and high-level government officials as well as politicians. Some researchers argue that CBDRR is the foundation of disaster risk governance. Unfortunately, globally, there is lack of studies on long-term and real-world experience of CBDRR. This article addresses this research gap by providing insights of CBDRR activities from a village in eastern Indonesia based on long-term studies. The adoption of CBDRR approach in Indonesia took place in the late 1990s and the authors have been part of the early adopters of the framework. Using longitudinal participant observations, this research combined qualitative and quantitative data collected during 1998-2017. It shows the rise and fall of a community responding to disaster risks over time. The article further highlights stories of frustrations and celebrations that surround CBDRR activities implemented by one local community in a dryland village in eastern Indonesia.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29955269 PMCID: PMC6014115 DOI: 10.4102/jamba.v10i1.502
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Jamba ISSN: 1996-1421
FIGURE 1Processes and tools of community-based disaster risk reduction frameworks.
FIGURE 2Toineke village in geographical context.
Mixed methods.
| Methods | Approach/source | Remarks | Timeline |
|---|---|---|---|
| Qualitative | Participatory action and learning | Risk mapping, food choice map, welfare ranking, coping mechanism, priorities and ranking | 2001, 2002 |
| Oral history | Elders as informants | 100 year scale | |
| Media report | - | 2000–2017 | |
| Social media | 2012–2016 | ||
| Discourse analysis | Village planning | 2011–2015 | |
| Secondary data | Situational reports | 1999–2010 | |
| Quantitative | Household survey | Food and livelihoods monitoring survey | 2007 |
| Statistical data | Secondary data | Village data 2000–2010; |
BPS, Badan Pusat Statistiks.
Hazard and problem ranking.
| Number | Type of hazards or problem | Spread or distribution | Magnitude | Frequency | Sum | Rank (cardinal system) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Pest and diseases | 3 | 2 | 3 | 8 | II |
| 2 | Drought | 3 | 3 | 2 | 8 | II |
| 3 | Flood and flood inundation | 3 | 3 | 3 | 9 | I |
| 4 | Lack of capital | 1 | 3 | 3 | 7 | III |
| 5 | Lack of skills | 1 | 1 | 3 | 5 | IV |
| 6 | Price volatility | 1 | 3 | 3 | 7 | III |
| 7 | Market access | 1 | 1 | 3 | 5 | IV |
| 8 | Wages | 1 | 3 | 3 | 7 | III |
Source: Risk and problem ranking, (PMPB, 2002, PRA Toineke village, Unpublished report, PMPB, Kupang)
For spread or distribution: 3 = all village affected; 2 = partial and 1 = only a fraction of the area get affected.
For magnitude: 3 = the event is very big, 2 = modest and 1 = small.
For frequency: 3 = occurs every year; 2 = 3–4 year event; 1 = the event seldom occurred.
Cardinal ranking means the participants summed.
Hazard and problem ranking.
| Number | Identified problems | Pre-2000 | Post-2000 | Remarks | Source of information |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Flood inundations and flood risk | Non-intervention – but late 1990s an NGO tried to mobilise the local communities to build drainage but failed | Build flood wall (embankment) to channel back to the river (2000–2001; 2003–2004) Plant trees along the flood wall (2006) | Most flood wall co-constructed by PMPB and the villagers have been damaged and less functioned Trees mortality was not properly counted/addressed systematically | PMPB ( |
| Food shortage associated with floods | Harvest palm; tamarind seeds and wild tubers (wild sweet potato) | On top of the past adaptation, the villagers expect to get subsidised rice | The good news is that subsidised rice seen as bonus | PMPB ( | |
| 2 | Drought | Pray for rainfall | Pray for rainfall Sales of NTFP products villagers expect to get subsidised rice Local government provide small dams | Some communities have been able to utilise small dams. Dynamics of local arrangement of the use of these dams are still unknown | PMPB ( |
| 3 | Pest attack and crop disease | Traditional ceremony | Pesticide use | No longer conduct traditional ceremony because of the passing away of elders | PMPB ( |
| 4 | Capital, marketing and price risk | Lower price during harvest; price volatility; lack of access to financial capital | In situ marketing of crops and NTFPs products during Saturday market; higher penetration of financial and credits services from outside | Better transportation Good transportation Volatility in production persist | PMPB ( |
| 5 | Labour and technology | Work manually | Still work manually | Lack of capital block access to technology | PMPB ( |
Source: PMPB, 2002, PRA Toineke village, Unpublished report, PMPB, Kupang; PMPB, 2007, PRA Toineke village, Unpublished report, PMPB, Kupang
Note: Please see the full reference list of the article, Lassa, J.A., Boli, Y., Nakmofa, Y., Fanggidae, S., Ofong, A. & Leonis, H., 2018, ‘Twenty years of community-based disaster risk reduction experience from a dryland village in Indonesia’, Jàmbá: Journal of Disaster Risk Studies 10(1), a502. https://doi.org/10.4102/jamba.v10i1.502, for more information.
NGOs, non-governmental organisations; NTFPs, non-timber forest products; PMPB, Perhimpunan Masyarakat Penanganan Bencana.
Drought-related hunger and famine history in Toineke.
| Number | Famine and hunger events | Trigger | Impact | Coping |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 1938–1940 | Long severe drought | Harvest failure; crop loss | Temporary migrate to original village to farm; exchange livestock with food |
| 2 | 1964–1965 | Long severe drought | Harvest failure; widespread crop loss | Harvest palm trees; wild tubers; exchange livestock with food |
| 3 | 1970–1971 | Moderate drought | Harvest failure; widespread loss | Harvest palm trees; wild tubers; exchange livestock with food; selling NTFP products to traders |
| 4 | 1972 | Pest attack, locust attack and moderate drought | Harvest failure; widespread crop loss | Harvest palm trees; wild tubers; exchange livestock with food; selling NTFP products to traders |
| 5 | 1997/1998 | Strong El-Niño | Harvest failure; widespread crop loss | Food aid in combination with harvest palm trees; wild tubers; exchange livestock with food; selling NTFP products to traders |
| 6 | 2007 | Drought | Moderate crop loss | Replanting; harvest palm trees; wild tubers; exchange livestock with food; selling NTFP products to traders |
| 7 | 2010 | Moderate drought | Moderate crop loss | Access to Raskin (food subsidy) |
| 8 | 2015 | Strong El-Niño | Severe drought; harvest failure; crop loss | Access to Raskin (food subsidy) – despite late response |
Source: PMPB, 2002, PRA Toineke village, Unpublished report, PMPB, Kupang; PMPB, 2007, PRA Toineke village, Unpublished report, PMPB, Kupang; and media reports, for example, Pos Kupang.
NTFP, non-timber forest product.
FIGURE 3Flood events and trends between the 1980s–2010s (flood frequency).