42
Stronger partnership
between the UN and
other international
humanitarian actors
5 Findings: Direct results and activities
57
This chapter presents findings relating to the direct results of cluster activities. They
include aspects relevant to relationships, e.g. on partnership and accountability,
as well as activities, including information sharing, the coordination of needs
assessments and strengthening of coherence.
5.1 Stronger partnership
58
This section covers the relationship between UN agencies and international NGOs,
as well as the Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement, whereas relationships to
national and local authorities, as well as national and local NGOs are discussed
below because they relate more directly to the quality of humanitarian response
(section 6.4). When the IASC initially launched its humanitarian reform,
partnership was not identified as a central element. Following strong criticism
from non-UN organizations that saw humanitarian reform as a top-down, UN-
centered endeavor, partnership was later added as a fourth pillar. It builds on the
Principles of Partnership developed by the Global Humanitarian Platform.
41
59
The introduction of the cluster approach has strengthened partnership between UN agencies
and international NGOs, as well as relationships among international NGOs. Risks
to partnership arise where clusters take an active role in deciding about the allocation of
resources and where clusters are too closely associated with peacekeeping forces or political
actors involved in the conflict.
60
Initially, many NGOs and other humanitarian actors resisted the cluster approach,
interpreting it as UN-centered.
42
Since then, however, much has changed and
the evaluation team encountered hardly any humanitarian organization in the
case study countries and none via the survey
43
with a fundamental or principled
opposition against the cluster approach.
44
This greater level of acceptance of the
cluster approach is reflected in a relatively high overall level of participation and
commitment, including among “observers” such as Médecins Sans Frontières
(MSF) and the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC). In several
41 Partnership is an agreement between various parties to work together to achieve common goals. It implies
a relationship at eye-level. The Global Humanitarian Platform defined the five principles of partnership as
equality, transparency, result-oriented approach, responsibility and complementarity (Global Humanitarian
Platform, 2007).
42 The IASC interim self assessment (2006), for example, mentions “tensions arising from efforts to implement
the cluster approach” (IASC 2006, p. 6), and phase 1 of this evaluation found that “the clusters are still
largely perceived as a UN-centric initiative” (Stoddard, Harmer et al., 2008, p. 19).
43 See Annex 6.
44 This finding is confirmed by the recent report of the NGOs and Humanitarian Reform Project. Based on five
mapping study countries (Democratic Republic of Congo, Ethiopia, Zimbabwe, Afghanistan and Sudan), it found
that “The level of engagement of NGOs with the cluster mechanism depends on a number of factors. Chief of
these is the perception of the value added by the cluster.” (NGOs and Humanitarian Reform Project, 2009, p. 24)
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