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EARLY RECOVERY

Early Recovery is an integrated approach to make the dividends of humanitarian action gradually sustainable. It includes all actors that can bring durable crisis prevention opportunities in-line with development objectives. EARLY RECOVERY. It is a recognised part of humanitarian response.

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EARLY RECOVERY

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  1. Early Recovery is an integrated approach to make the dividends of humanitarian action gradually sustainable. It includes all actors that can bring durable crisis prevention opportunities in-line with development objectives. EARLY RECOVERY • It is a recognised part of humanitarian response. • It is system-wide. • It bridges the divide between humanitarian and development work (and capitalises on both). • It is the foundation for building resilience in crisis-affected countries.

  2. ER DRR Humanitarian response…..development

  3. UPDATE ON EARLY RECOVERY • IASC Principals meeting, December. • Mainstreaming ER into the overall humanitarian response. Clusters integrate ER into their work. • The ‘call it what it is’ cluster can be created at country level to meet specific needs not covered by existing clusters. The HCT will determine the name of this cluster based on the specific issues it addresses (‘call it what it is’). Examples of this have been the Community Restoration Cluster (Pakistan), LICI Cluster (Livelihoods, Institutional Capacity Building, Infrastructure; Zimbabwe), GIL cluster (Governance, Infrastructure, Livelihoods, Uganda). • Early Recovery Advisory support to Humanitarian Coordinators (HCs). • CWGER (and Global Protection Cluster) responsibilities in implementing the SG Decision on Durable Solutions (three pilot countries).

  4. WHAT IS EARLY RECOVERY (IN 2 MINUTES) • Minimising disruptions to normality as much as possible in a crisis. • Returning communities t normality at the earliest time possible. • Integrating risk reduction into crisis response to mitigate the impact of future crises. • Maintaining markets and purchasing power. • Maintaining and/or rebuilding basic infrastructure to support the resumption of business, assist public service delivery. • Building capacities of local authorities and other local actors to provide sustainable solutions to crisis prevention; and establish stronger local authorities (preparation and response to crises) • Empowering communities and reducing aid dependency. • Research and information gathering to inform humanitarian and recovery response (IDPs and refugees: durable solutions)

  5. It is not a phase, it is an approach to humanitarian work! It is a phase that comes quickly after relief DEMYSTIFYING EARLY RECOVERY It includes issues related to livelihoods, but also other issues to help rebuild after a crisis: public services interruptions, infrastructure, markets… It is all about livelihoods It is something that all actors should do It is something that UNDP does It sometimes fills the gaps other clusters do not cover. But the ER cluster does not replace ER programming across clusters It fills the gaps other clusters don’t cover It fills the gap between humanitarian work and development The approach should reduce / eradicate the gap between humanitarian and development work It happens after, before, and even during a crisis. Mitigation, preparedness, response, rebuilding….. It happens after a crisis Stregthening Early Recovery and DRR in the Kenya EHRP+

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