ISSUE 45 December 2009
Humanitarian Exchange Magazine
Humanitarian reform: a progress report
First rolled out following the earthquake in Pakistan and Kashmir in October 2005, the Humanitarian Reform process sought to address gaps in the international response to humanitarian crises, and to improve timeliness, effectiveness and predictability. The reform’s approach was three-pronged: first, the introduction of clusters to better coordinate sectoral responses and identify a lead agency which would provide predictable leadership and coordination and act as the provider of last resort; second, to improve the availability of quick-response funding through the Central Emergency Response Fund (CERF), established in March 2006; and third, to improve humanitarian leadership by strengthening the role and capacity of Humanitarian Coordinators. Under the subsequent Principles of Partnership, endorsed by the Global Humanitarian Platform in 2007,[1] 40 heads of agencies, including from the UN and NGOs, agreed to a set of values to underpin their humanitarian work, including equality, transparency, a results-oriented approach, responsibility and complementarity.
The NGOs and Humanitarian Reform Project was set up towards the end of 2008 to strengthen the effective engagement of local, national and international NGOs in these new coordination and financing mechanisms.[2] The project began by commissioning a series of mapping studies in Afghanistan, Ethiopia, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Sudan and Zimbabwe, to document NGOs’ experiences of Humanitarian Reform mechanisms. The findings were brought together in a report published in October 2009, entitled Synthesis Report Review of Engagement of NGOs with the Humanitarian Reform Process. This article highlights the report’s main findings and recommendations, and outlines next steps.
The chariot wheel of humanitarian reform
Instead of the usual model, which conceptualises reform as comprising three ‘pillars’ (coordination, financing and leadership), the synthesis report proposes a conceptual framework based upon a chariot wheel, with three spokes. These spokes are closely dependent on the central hub of donor funding, and the binding wheel rims of accountability to crisis-affected communities and partnership (both initially conspicuously absent from the Humanitarian Reform agenda). All must work in tandem if humanitarian response is to be fast and effective, and if it is to meet the needs of crisis-affected people.
Figure by John Cosgrave.
[1] The GHP, set up in 2006, brought together heads of agencies from the three main strands of humanitarian actions: UN agencies, NGOs and the Red Cross/Red Crescent Movement, plus the World Bank. See www.globalhumanitarianplatform.org.
[2] See www.icva.ch/ngsoandhumanitarianreform.html for further details. Six international NGOs make up the project consortium: ActionAid, CAFOD, Care International UK, IRC-UK, Oxfam and Save the Children UK. The International Council of Voluntary Agencies is also a member. The three-year project runs until October 2011, and is funded by DFID.
Featured in this issue
- Humanitarian action in Colombia
- Neutrality, impartiality and independence in Colombia: an ICRC perspective
- Military participation in humanitarian action: reflections on the Colombia case
- Protecting civilians and enhancing security in Colombia: what’s the difference?
- Colombia’s landmine crisis
- Displacement and return in Colombia
- Conflict transformation and the urban displaced in Colombia
- Implementing humanitarian reform in Colombia
Practice & Policy Notes
- Drug-trafficking, anti-narcotics policy and security: another humanitarian cost of the Colombian conflict
- Changing the way we lead: how changes in attitude and behaviour in Cluster Coordinators support humanitarian reform
- Humanitarian reform: a progress report
- Implementing the WASH Cluster: good practice and lessons learned
- Perception and acceptance at community level: the case of MSF in Yemen
- Tackling Sleeping Sickness in conflict
- Kabul, Afghanistan: a case study in responding to urban displacement
- Collaboration and partnership in humanitarian action
- Analysing market systems in emergencies: the EMMA Toolkit
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