Community empowerment plays a critical role in disaster mitigation by strengthening local knowledge, skills, and collective capacity to manage disaster risks beyond reliance on government assistance. This study aims to examine how community empowerment activities function as urban disaster mitigation practices, using Panjang Sub-district, Bandar Lampung City, as an empirical case. Specifically, the research addresses two guiding hypotheses: (1) that post-disaster community empowerment activities enhance community awareness and preparedness, and (2) that post-disaster conditions stimulate stronger participation from communities and institutions in mitigation efforts. Panjang Sub-district was selected due to its recurrent exposure to floods and landslides. Data were collected through in-depth interviews (n = 10), non-participatory field observations, and analysis of official documents, all conducted between March and June 2023 following a series of flood events in late 2022 and early 2023. Interview data were obtained from purposively selected informants representing the Regional Disaster Management Agency, local government, community leaders, and affected residents. Findings demonstrate that community empowerment in Panjang operates as a staged and conditional process, implemented through enabling, strengthening, protection, support, maintenance, and evaluation mechanisms. The study’s novelty lies in empirically showing that economic vulnerability and post-disaster livelihood insecurity shape the sequencing of empowerment, where material support and leadership legitimacy become prerequisites for effective disaster preparedness engagement. By grounding disaster mitigation analysis in clearly specified qualitative data sources, this study contributes original insights into how urban communities in disaster-prone areas co-produce preparedness through socially mediated empowerment processes.
Hidayati et al. (Thu,) studied this question.