This study maps the resilience of communities living around coal mining areas in Indonesia through a Systematic Literature Review (SLR) approach. Data were collected from empirical articles in Indonesian and English published between 2021 and 2026, identified using Publish or Perish, and screened using PICOC and PRISMA, resulting in 18 full-text articles eligible for analysis. The synthesis shows that community resilience is formed across four main dimensions: economic resilience, socio-community resilience, institutional resilience, and environmental resilience. The most dominant dimension is economic resilience, particularly in the form of livelihood diversification, strengthening household income, and the search for alternative sources of livelihood beyond the mining sector. Socio-community and institutional resilience play important roles in strengthening adaptive capacity through social capital, citizen participation, governance, and CSR programs, while environmental resilience remains a major challenge because post-mining ecological recovery has not yet been fully optimized.
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