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© 2002, CARE USA. All rights reserved. CARE’s Global Food Security Strategy; an Agenda for Action.

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Presentation on theme: "© 2002, CARE USA. All rights reserved. CARE’s Global Food Security Strategy; an Agenda for Action."— Presentation transcript:

1 © 2002, CARE USA. All rights reserved. CARE’s Global Food Security Strategy; an Agenda for Action

2 © 2005, CARE USA. All rights reserved. Agenda for Action : purpose A proposed coherent framework for CARE’s role in responding to global food insecurity. Drafted by members of the FSAG group in July Now seeking input/feedback from throughout CI Once there is consensus, turn this into a CI-wide position with an AoP and links to LOTE

3 © 2005, CARE USA. All rights reserved. Business model Food Security Advisory Group  A broad range of CARE Members  Both Emergency & Development  Both Policy/Advocacy & Programming  Bringing media & communications on board, need to increase CO & RMU representation  Regular conference calls & physical meetings

4 © 2005, CARE USA. All rights reserved. Process 1. Builds on pre-existing coordination mech. 2. Galvanized by recent rapid and dramatic increases in food prices and subsequent public and political interest. 3. Vienna meeting, July 2008: Agenda for Action – take to Global Conference.

5 © 2005, CARE USA. All rights reserved. Agenda for Action: Internal issues CARE’ Agenda for Action proposes to focus on four core elements that support two aspects of food security: ProtectionPromotion Humanitarian AssistanceAgricultural & Livestock value chain Social ProtectionMicro-finance

6 © 2002, CARE USA. All rights reserved. Emergency Food Security Strategy; one element of CARE’s Global Food Security Strategy Draft

7 © 2005, CARE USA. All rights reserved. Background  CARE committed to build capacity in 3 core sectors in emergencies with a cross-cutting logistics capacity: 1) Shelter 2) Watsan 3) Food Security  CARE USA is taking work forward for CI  CARE’s Emergency Food Security Progress & Strategy  Foundational Work: CARE Emergency Food Security Capacity Review, Tufts University State of the Art Emergency Food Security Review, Emergency Food Security Forum hosted by Oxfam & CARE  CI food security strategy: 4 elements – includes emergency food security  Emergency Food Security Strategy: Under development – draft form -

8 © 2005, CARE USA. All rights reserved. Characteristic of Food Security Food security crises are seldom discrete events, they have their roots in chronic vulnerability. Our guiding principle should be Disaster Risk Management – in all our programming. Food insecurity is multi-dimensional and represents an outcome of a range of factors. In order to address it we need to address a range of issues.

9 © 2005, CARE USA. All rights reserved. Implications… Protect Lives and Livelihoods by Integrating Disaster Risk Management into both its emergency and development systems and structures - Integration into long term programming - Adapt CARE's emergency systems to slow onset emergencies - build upon and link to CARE’s longer term food security programming.

10 © 2005, CARE USA. All rights reserved. Implications.. Address the context specific drivers of food insecurity by having the capability to implement emergency interventions in three key sectors and cross cutting analysis: 1. Food Aid 2. Nutrition & Public Health 3. Livelihoods & Market support +Analysis Given the range of interventions that is required collaboration and coherence between units across the CARE Federation will be critical

11 © 2005, CARE USA. All rights reserved. Current State of the Emergency Food Security Sector  Disproportionate Responses The current system lacks the capacity to define and compare severity.  Late Responses Early Warning is not leading to early response  Inappropriate Responses Interventions are dominated by a core set of standard / default responses  Food First Bias

12 © 2005, CARE USA. All rights reserved. Emergency Food Security Strategy Objectives 1. Global: Contribute to the evolution of the global humanitarian food security architecture to ensure it addresses structural causes of vulnerability and poverty. 2. Organizational: Align and strengthen CARE’s organizational capabilities to be able to deliver more appropriate, proportionate and effective food security interventions before, during and after times of crisis. 3. Field: Support Focus Country Offices and emergency responses globally to implement CARE’s global food security strategy through a portfolio of comprehensive food security interventions that build upon and actively strengthen national institutions.

13 © 2005, CARE USA. All rights reserved. Objective 1: Global: Contribute to the evolution of the global humanitarian food security architecture to ensure it addresses structural causes of vulnerability and poverty. 1.1 Leverage CARE’s “Living on the Edge” initiative to help bridge the relief development divide and promote appropriate needs-based interventions. 1.2 Support a common, integrated approach to understanding and responding to hunger and vulnerability

14 © 2005, CARE USA. All rights reserved. Objective 2: Organizational: Align and strengthen CARE’s organizational capabilities 2.1. Improve CARE’s analytical capacity to design and trigger more appropriate & proportionate responses 2.2 Develop CARE’s capacity to implement early response & recovery interventions which protect livelihoods and mitigate the impact of crises. 2.3 Consolidate CARE’s existing capacity to implement comprehensive and robust food assistance & nutrition interventions that address the acute negative outcomes of food insecurity 2.4 Develop Strategic Partnerships to support a portfolio of interventions

15 © 2005, CARE USA. All rights reserved. Objective 3: Field: Support Focus Country Offices and emergency responses globally to implement CARE’s global food security strategy 3.1 Support Focus Country Offices and Emergency Responses globally to implement CARE’s global food security strategy. 3.2 Actively support and strengthen national institutions & local agencies 3.3 Address issues of Gender & Protection to minimize unintended Harm.

16 © 2005, CARE USA. All rights reserved. IMPLEMENATATION  Phase 1 (FY 2009): The final 6 months of FY 2009 will focus on broad consultation across the CARE Federation to finalize the Humanitarian Food Security Strategy and develop a detailed funding plan.  Phase 2 (FY 2010): The initial implementation of the Humanitarian Food Security Strategy will prioritize support to focus countries and global emergencies, the consolidation of CARE’s existing capacity and limited Global Advocacy. Broader capacity building will be carried out in phase three, but capacity building for market-based responses (cash & vouchers) will be fast-tracked to avoid CARE loosing significant ground to peer agencies.  Phase 3 (2011/12): The final phase of the strategy will involve broader support for focus countries and global emergencies, a scale up of capacity building and a greater integration of field operations and Global Advocacy.

17 © 2002, CARE USA. All rights reserved. Food Security Specific Contingency Planning Draft

18 © 2005, CARE USA. All rights reserved. When is Contingency Planning Needed?  The EPP tool is for planning for potential emergencies usually on a yearly basis, whereas the Contingency Planning tool is used to develop a detailed plan in response to a specific unfolding emergency at the onset of emergency.  If a CO has an EPP food security scenario it would begin Contingency Planning once the trigger indicators are being tripped  If a CO does not have an EPP food security scenario, the Country Office would begin contingency planning once early warning systems identify an unfolding crisis Emergency Preparedness Plan Scenario 1: Conflict Scenario 2: Food Security Crisis Scenario 3: Floods Food Security Contingency Plan Current Phase Possible Phase 1: Acute Crisis Possible Phase 2: Famine Early Warning - EPP triggers are being tripped

19 © 2005, CARE USA. All rights reserved.  The highest prevalence of malnutrition often is a result of restricted food access or failure in 2 or more of the underlying causes  Mapping and understanding the underlying and immediate can help to identify and prioritize mitigation and response activities to ensure early response appropriate actions.

20 © 2005, CARE USA. All rights reserved. 4 stages Linked to EPP & Emergency Response Strategy 1. Livelihoods Analysis: HLS / HEA 2. Situation Analysis: IPC 3. Response Analysis: Technical & Operational 4. Strategic Response Framework: outlines goal, objectives, interventions & links to Emergency Response Strategy


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