Speakers Facilitator John Ging Chair IASC Emergency Directors Group

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Presentation transcript:

Speakers Facilitator John Ging Chair IASC Emergency Directors Group Silvia Danailov Chief Humanitarian Field Support Section, Office of Emergency Programmes, UNICEF Domitillé Galli Emergency Coordinator / RRMP Manager, Norwegian Refugee Council Facilitator Panos Moumtzis Director, IASC Senior Transformative Agenda Implementation Team (STAIT)

What are the different roles of the global and country levels in ensuring a fast response? What systems exist at global level to ensure speedy delivery of assistance? UNDAC Misstion to Haiti, 2010. Credit: OCHA

What are the different roles of the global and country levels in ensuring a fast response? What systems exist at global level to ensure speedy delivery of assistance? National Coordination (NEMA, Ministries, National Red Cross Society, etc.) Technical (National Civil Protection, Fire Fighters, Police, Medical Services, National NGOs, affected people, Specific Military Disaster Response Teams, etc.) Ad Hoc Capacity at national level (National Armies and National Civil Protection Agencies without specific DRTs, local enterprises, private citizens, etc.) Regional Coordination (ECHO, ASEAN, CEDEMA, etc.) Technical (EUCPT, APHP, CEDEMA/RNAT, etc.) Ad Hoc capacity at a regional level (diasporas, large enterprises, etc.) Global Coordination (UNDAC, IFRC/FACT) Technical (INSARAG, WHO/FMTs, IHP, MapAction, DHL/DRT, etc.) Ad Hoc Capacity at a global level (large multinational corporations, large diasporas, etc.)

What rapid response mechanisms exist at country level and how do these work?

Rapid Response Comparison Issue Mandate Year of Establishment Single or Multiple Mechanisms Coordination Linkage with Clusters Governance Pre-funding Funding sources Management Partners involved Geographic coverage Dedicated Teams Sectors involved Prepositioning - capital/province First/last resort Short-term/longer-term Assess then deliver/ assess and deliver Assessment type Specific features What rapid response mechanisms exist at country level and how do these work? Democratic Republic of Congo Central African Republic South Sudan Iraq

What is the role of NGOs in these rapid response mechanisms?

Are rapid response mechanisms only about delivery of materials or can they be more holistic in responding to needs? What about protection for example?

What are the lessons learned so far from DRC and other contexts?

What can an HCT do to start up a rapid response mechanism What can an HCT do to start up a rapid response mechanism? Where can we get support?

Where can I get help? Documents on RRM in DRC/Evaluation RRM, CAR RRM Briefing Note, South Sudan RRM Briefing Note http://www.humanitarianresponse.info/topics/transformative-agenda/documents https://drive.google.com/open?id=0B16HYv8xUNm9fjl3aEFCMWZHWUZFNEM3U2xoTFZWcmNudXdyejFPbXVrVVdYeklQWjNNT0E&authuser=0 2. Global - Links for Individual Mechanisms in Rapid Response Mapping document 3. Country - Focal Points – in RRM Country Comparison Document