17
Humanitarian
reform and
the
cluster approach
Purpose
of the evaluation
1 Introduction
1
In 2005, the Emergency Relief Coordinator in close coordination with the
Inter-Agency Steering Committee (IASC) initiated an ambitious reform of the
humanitarian system based on a thorough review of its operations. This reform
aims at strengthening the effectiveness of humanitarian response to emergencies
across the globe. It builds on four pillars: humanitarian financing,
4
the
Humanitarian Coordinator system, partnership among all humanitarian actors
and the cluster approach. The cluster approach is a system of coordination in
which a lead organization, designated for priority areas of response, is responsible
for organizing coordination at global and country level, strengthening global
preparedness, developing global guidance and acting as provider of last resort.
2
When introducing the cluster approach, the IASC requested an evaluation of its
implementation in two phases. Phase 1 of the evaluation was finalized in 2007
and focused on processes related to the implementation of the cluster approach.
5
Phase 2 focuses on the outcomes generated by the cluster approach and takes
a country-level perspective to bring the reality on the ground back to decision
makers at the global level.
3
After five years of implementation the evaluation is timely, because significant
resources have been invested in the cluster approach and important experiences
have been collected. The evaluation is guided by two main aims:
•
To assess the main outcomes of the joint humanitarian response at country
level, with particular reference to the role of the cluster approach and other
components of the humanitarian reform process and the overall operational
effectiveness of the cluster approach in facilitating and supporting the
coordinated humanitarian response at country level.
•
To present suggestions on how the cluster approach can be further improved
and strengthened.
The results of this evaluation were presented to the IASC Working Group, which
has created a Task Team on Coordination that will create a management response
plan in reaction to the recommendations made.
4 Initiatives to strengthen humanitarian financing include the introduction of
new funding mechanisms such
as the Central Emergency Response Fund (CERF)
and Pooled Funding, but
also strengthening existing
mechanisms such as the Emergency Response Fund (ERF), the Consolidated Appeals Process (CAP) or
the Good Humanitarian Donorship initiative. For a comprehensive review
of humanitarian financing
instruments, please refer to Stoddard (2008) or Barber et al. (2008) for the CERF.
5 See Stoddard, Harmer et al. (2008).
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