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Journal : Jurnal Partisipatoris

PARTICIPATORY MAPPING FOR DISASTERS IN TULUNGREJO VILLAGE, BUMIAJI SUB-DISTRICT, BATU CITY Amiruddin, Lutfi; Rozalinna, Genta Mahardhika
Jurnal Partisipatoris Vol 2, No 1 (2020): Jurnal Partisipatoris
Publisher : University of Muhammadiyah Malang

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.22219/jp.v2i1.11743

Abstract

The ecological situation in Batu has a significant potential disaster, one of the areasthat have this is Tulungrejo village in the Bumiaji sub-district of Batu city. In general,there have been thirty-two disaster outbreaks in the Bumiaji sub-district; the areawith the most disaster risk is Tulungrejo village. Therefore, as an awareness ofemergency response situations, participatory mapping for disaster potential risk isessential to conduct by using the information of local people. This research appliedthe Participatory Geographic Information System (Pgis) as the mapping approach.The purpose of using this approach is to produce a disaster risk potential map asthe reference in determining the priority of disaster risk reduction based on theinformation that exists in the local area. This participatory mapping is an essentialpart of creating the social-technical resilience by the community.
The Resilience of Urban Kampong Community in the Aftermath of the Pandemic Amiruddin, Lutfi; Nurhadi , Iwan
Jurnal Partisipatoris Vol. 6 No. 1 (2024): March
Publisher : University of Muhammadiyah Malang

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.22219/jp.v6i1.32191

Abstract

The impacts of the Covid-19 Pandemic have struck the economic and public health of urban residents. As a community who live in densely populated areas around Pasar Besar Malang, kampong inhabitants must cope with the outbreak as well as recover in the aftermath the pandemic using their own resources. This article investigated the role of the collective memory contributed to forming local knowledge to make the best way to deal with the pandemic turbulences as well as how people started to initiate resilience using the urban infrastructure resources in post-outbreak. Utilizing the qualitative method, the results show two essential findings. First, the collective memory of the past plague was absent in communities’ everyday life for a long time of period which made people have no simple guidance to overcome the pandemic impacts. The politics of ethnic segregation in housing during Colonial Era contribute for keeping distance people from the outbreak history. Second, several urban infrastructures such as clean water supply and public electricity which were properly provided for kampong community devoted in composing resilience during until after the pandemic. Ultimately, using those physical infrastructures the social structures were transformed.