1 / 12

Drought Resilience and Growth in the Horn of Africa

Drought Resilience and Growth in the Horn of Africa. Peter Ewell, USAID/East Africa. Evolving Framework. Major drought of 2010-11 focused attention on imbalance between humanitarian assistance and long-term support for development

merry
Download Presentation

Drought Resilience and Growth in the Horn of Africa

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Drought Resilience and Growth in the Horn of Africa Peter Ewell, USAID/East Africa

  2. Evolving Framework • Major drought of 2010-11 focused attention on imbalance between humanitarian assistance and long-term support for development • Summit in September 2011 set up coordinated regional response, expanded roles for IGAD and support from multiple donors • IGAD has developed a Drought Resilience and Sustainability platform, countries have developed Country Program Papers • After high-level meeting in Nairobi in April, 2012, development partners formed Global Alliance for Action for Drought Resilience and Growth • USAID missions for Kenya, Ethiopia, and East Africa revised our strategies under Feed the Future initiative better linking OFDA, Food for Peace, and development assistance in the drylands

  3. Humanitarian Assistance Development Assistance HoAJoint Planning Framework Protect lives and livelihoods, stabilize nutritional status, and create a platform for recovery and resilience Manage risk to sustain and accelerate recovery, enhance resilience and support economic growth Ensure sustainable natural resource base and support competitive and profitable livestock sector Risk– Resilience - Growth Financial Services Community-Based Management/Mitigation of Conflict & Disaster Emergency food/ Non-Food Assistance Livestock Production & Marketing Cash/Food for Assets Diversified Livelihood Opportunities Regional Trade Nutritional Rehabilitation Water Harvesting & Management Institutional Capacity Building Emergency Destocking Knowledge Management and Learning

  4. Global Alliance for Action for Drought Resilience and Growth • Representatives from the headquarters of development partners: • Denmark - EU/DEVCO - World Bank • Sweden - EU/ECHO - FAO • UK - Switzerland - UNDP • Germany - Japan - WFP • USA - Ireland - UNICEF

  5. Membership is open • The Alliance is supported by a rotating “Convener” – currently USAID has volunteered for 1 year. • The Alliance supports active communicationbetween agencies • Routine conference calls and meetings • Field visits • A website provides an interim tool for sharing resources and documentation http://www.globalallianceforaction.com/

  6. Focus Operating principles Develop a common understanding on drought resilience, and an integrated approach to humanitarian relief and development. Promote harmonization and communication across agencies and between HQ and field. Ensure accountability and develop M&E approach, especially for implementation of the Nairobi communiqué Respect and support national and regional ownership & leadership, and foster clarity on roles at each level. Light footprint approach, offering support to country & regional-level actors Build on existing structures and initiatives.

  7. Support for the IGAD Resilience Platform Capacity and technical support • GIZ • USAID/East Africa • FAO • UNDP • African Development Bank • WFP • World Bank • DFID • EU Broader Institutional Strengthening Action Plan (ISAP) • The Nordic donors

  8. Technical ConsortiumSupport to IGAD and County Teams • CGIAR Centres led by ILRI and FAO Investment Centre in Rome • Country Program Papers (CPPs) and Regional Program Paper (RPP) • Natural Resource Management • Disaster Risk Management • Livelihoods and basic services support • Access to Markets and Trade • Research and Knowledge Management • Conflict Resolution and Peace-Building • Technical briefs • Support for baselines and M&E Framework • Support to teams developing proposals to World Bank and other donors

  9. USAID – Building on Past Programs • Ethiopia has coordinated humanitarian and development assistance for some years • Partner in Productive Safety Net program • Work in pastoral areas; commercial de-stocking, crisis modifiers, milk matters, etc. • Focus on evaluation and analysis • Kenya livestock program • East Africa’s RELPA project • Regional policy and knowledge management • Coordination of livelihood support, NRM, conflict management, and other activities among multiple partners in cross-border Mandera triangle

  10. Areas of Expanded Support • Emphasis on coordination and joint programming between OFDA, Food for Peace, and development programs • Support livestock as a priority regional value chain • Focus on market linkages • Work with AU-IBAR on standard methods for animal health • Support livelihoods/build assets for communities and households • Support to IGAD to build capacity for coordination • Support capacity of key national institutions • Support programs in governance and conflict mitigation

  11. Knowledge Management and Learning Agenda • Continuously strengthen the evidence base • Facilitate and catalyze widespread adoption of effective models using the Collaboration, Learning, and Adaptation (CLA) approach • Facilitate the adoption of resilience-enhancing technologies and innovations – evaluations, best practices • Document and test models for integrating humanitarian and development assistance • Strengthen the capacity of regional, national, and local institutions to translate learning into programs and policies • Address gender issues that are key to achieving growth and resilience

  12. Thank-you!

More Related