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The IASC Transformative Agenda. 2010. Floods in Pakistan. Earthquakes In Haiti. UN Photo/Evan Schneider . UN Photo/Logan Abassi . The humanitarian programme cycle ‘mix and match’ Each group will receive the steps of the programme cycle and their ‘descriptions’
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2010 Floods in Pakistan Earthquakes In Haiti UN Photo/Evan Schneider UN Photo/Logan Abassi
The humanitarian programme cycle ‘mix and match’ • Each group will receive the steps of the programmecycle and their ‘descriptions’ • First, match the steps with their respective descriptions • Then arrange all the steps (with their descriptions) in a logical order • N.B. I have also thrown in some ‘enablers’ which support the programme cycle – please put these in the middle of your cycle!
L3 Emergency
Major sudden-onset humanitarian emergency triggered by natural disaster or conflict which requires system-wide mobilization • Criteria used by IASC Principals to determine response: • Scale • Urgency • Complexity • Capacity to respond (national and international) • Reputational Risk
Emergency Response Preparedness (ERP)
Approach developed by IASC SWG for action prior to a crisis, consists of: • Risk Profiling, resulting in a ‘country risk profile’; • Early warning monitoring, to detect signs of impending crisis and take early action to mitigate or prevent the crisis; • Developing contingency response plan, to bring all actors to advanced level of readiness; • Taking minimum preparedness actions (MPAs) for each step of the programme cycle; • Agreeing standard operating procedures (including roles and responsibilities) for the initial emergency response.
Needs Assessment & Analysis
The collection, consolidation and analysis of needs data through which a joint, inter-cluster analysis process derives a shared understanding of the development and impact of a crisis; this is presented in the form of a ‘Humanitarian Needs Overview’; • Provides the foundation, or ‘evidence-base’ for a coherent response as the situation evolves; • Requires interaction and coordination with affected people, local actors, the government and national aid organisations, and all sectors/clusters involved in the response.
Multi-cluster initial rapid assessment (MIRA)
A joint, multi-sector assessment done during the first 2 weeks of a new emergency or rapid deterioration or an existing emergency • Intended to facilitate a common understanding of overall humanitarian needs and provide decision-makers with accurate, reliable information in a timely manner • Expected Outputs are: • The ‘Situation Analysis’ (previously known as Preliminary Scenario Definition) produced with 48 hours, used to gauge severity of crisis and inform the HC/HCT’s strategic statement (day 3) and preliminary response plan (day 5-8) • A Final Report at 2 weeks, used to inform development of the country strategic response plan (produced by day 30) • Used primarily to: • Assist in identifying constraints and focuses on operational issues; • Establishes working relationships that are critical in a crisis; • Reinforces coordination structures and determines what additional structures could be needed; and • Clarifies roles and responsibilities, including the leadership of sector/cluster groups. • Approach assumes that plans developed in response phase are based on Contingency Response Plans
most frequently used in protracted crisis in alignment with planning and review cycles • Agencies/clusters do separate assessments in a way which allows data to be aggregated • This data is then analysed to produce a shared picture of the humanitarian situation, and needs are prioritised • The results of the needs assessment and analysis process are presented in a ‘humanitarian needs overview’ which is used for strategic planning
HC/HCT management tool that outlines the strategic direction of the response, i.e. WHAT the HCT is trying to achieve WHERE and HOW • Builds on the strategic statement and contains the following elements: • Country strategy: • An overview of the crisis and the parameters of the strategy • A limited number of strategic objectives and indicators (output, outcome) • Sector/cluster response plans: • Activities per strategic objective per sector • Estimated funding requirements
Resource Mobilisation
Can be done through emergency appeals (for sudden-onset emergencies) and consolidated appeals (for protracted crises) • Joint appeals demonstrate to donors that there is a coherent, well-coordinated, properly budgeted strategic plan; the plan should guide their funding decisions to address the highest priority humanitarian needs • The initial response plan and strategic response plan now serve as the country-specific appeal documents which were previously known as the Flash Appeal and the CAP
framework based upon output and input indicators from strategic response plan • relevant clusters and sectoral groups play a critical role in helping collect and compile the strategic-level reporting data • reporting on the strategic response plan indicators must be done at a minimum every 3 to 4 months • In L3 emergency, reporting and HCT review of reporting information may need to occur more frequently (monthly or even weekly) than in other emergencies • As emergency situation stabilises, gradual development of monitoring framework will follow
Information Management
The humanitarian programme cycle is to be supported by standardized process, systems and tools, some of which include: • A common web platform (humanitarianresponse.org) • Common Operational Dataset (CODs) and Fundamental Operational Datasets (FODs) registries • Financial Tracking Service (FTS) • The On-line Project System (OPS) • Cluster/agency specific systems • IASC organisations have a key role to play in ensuring the quality control and coherence of above actions
Bringing the relevant actors together and facilitating agreement on: • What is the problem? (needs assessment and analysis) • What are we going to do about it? (strategic planning – country level) • How? (strategic planning – sectoral level) • How are we going to pay for it? (resource mobilisation) • How will we check we are doing what we said we would do? (monitoring) • How will we get ready for the next time? (emergency response preparedness)