Community empowerment strategies are often conceptualized as linear processes from planning to evaluation, despite evidence that rural governance operates under complex structural constraints. This study analyzes how the Garut Regency Government’s strategy to improve human resource quality operates in Cisewu District and assesses its effectiveness within a structurally limited rural context. A qualitative case study design was employed, drawing on document analysis, in-depth interviews, and field observation. The findings demonstrate that the strategy functions not as a linear cycle but as an interdependent adaptive system linking strategic goals, environmental constraints, policy direction, local implementation capacity, and learning mechanisms. Clearly articulated planning indicators do not automatically translate into substantive impact, as implementation is mediated by geographic isolation, infrastructure limitations, uneven village capacity, and leadership variation. Program effectiveness varies across villages, while output-oriented monitoring constrains outcome-based learning and strategic recalibration. This study advances public strategy scholarship by extending Mulgan’s framework and conceptualizing rural empowerment strategy as an adaptive governance loop rather than a sequential planning model. Practically, it highlights the need for outcome-based evaluation, differentiated village assistance, and institutionalized feedback mechanisms to enhance sustainable human resource development.
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