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1.1. Welcome & Introductions

1.1. Welcome & Introductions. Food Security Cluster Needs Assessment Workshop Dhaka, Bangladesh 19 – 20 February 2012. Welcome. Introductions. Please tell us your: Name Position Organisation Main expectation for this workshop

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1.1. Welcome & Introductions

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  1. 1.1. Welcome & Introductions Food Security Cluster Needs Assessment Workshop Dhaka, Bangladesh 19 – 20 February 2012

  2. Welcome

  3. Introductions Please tell us your: • Name • Position • Organisation • Main expectation for this workshop (Please write your main expectation on a piece of paper and hand it to facilitators for compiling)

  4. Overall Purpose • Strengthen coordination knowledge, skills, and attitudes of participants in order to enhance the effectiveness of the food security cluster

  5. Workshop Objectives After this workshop, participants should be able to: • Explain a number of fundamental food security concepts • Explain the “phased” approach to food security assessment (initial, rapid, and in-depth food security assessment) • Describe the primary and secondary data collection tools associated with each type of food security assessment • Identify a number of food security response options • Identify the key stakeholders in food security in Bangladesh and “who is responsible for what” (re: administration, logistics, and technical aspects of a food security assessment)

  6. Agenda Day 1: Fundamentals of Food Security Assessment • Welcome, Objectives & Introductions (background of GFSC)Markets & FS • Food Security: Fundamentals and Frameworks • Food Security Assessments: Phases & Tools • The Current Situation: FS Assessment in Practices in Bangladesh • Working groups on the rapid assessment tools. • Day 2: Coordinating Food Security Assessments • Group Presentations • Market Analysis • The Need: Coordinating FS assessment and analysis • FS Assessment Responsibilities: Who does (or should do!) what? • Overview of Food Security Response Options • IPC • Next Steps

  7. One rule that you will perceive as entirely unfair and unjust but, well, that’s life… Multi-tasking is a fancy word we all use for not really focusing on anything: No laptops during sessions – unless requested by facilitators Please feel free to “not really focus” during the breaks

  8. Independent Humanitarian Response Review (August 2005) Humanitarian Reform - History Changing Environment • Proliferation of actors • Changing role of UN • Competitive funding • Increased public scrutiny • New humanitarian actors Review Findings • Gaps • Limited linkages • Erratic coordination • Insufficient accountability • Inconsistent donor policies Humanitarian Reform Process (September 2005)

  9. Humanitarian Reform – Key Components Aim - ‘Build a stronger, more predictable humanitarian response system’ Three pillars of reform and the foundation: 3 1 2 CLUSTER APPROACH Adequate capacity and predictable leadership in all sectors HUMANITARIAN COORDINATORS (HCs) Effective leadership and coordination in humanitarian emergencies HUMANITARIAN FINANCING Adequate, timely and flexible financing PARTNERSHIP Strong partnerships between all parties

  10. The Cluster Approach General Humanitarian KnowledgeThe Cluster Approach To assure high standards of predictability, accountability and partnership in all sectors More strategic responses Better prioritization of available resources Sector groups of international and national agencies at global and country levels Coordinated by designated Cluster Lead Agencies (CLAs) What are clusters? Why clusters?

  11. Humanitarian Principles International humanitarian and human right law & humanitarian principles Humanity Impartiality Neutrality Independence Principles of Partnership Equality Transparency Result-oriented approach Responsibility Complementarity

  12. Global Clusters General Humanitarian KnowledgeThe Cluster Approach Global cluster lead agencies (CLAs) are designated by the IASC and work with partners to strengthen field response and provide predictable leadership Normative: Standard setting, tools, and best practices Capacity/Preparedness: training, surge support, stockpiles Operational Support: advocacy and resource mobilization Emergency Relief Coordinator (OCHA) Partners, others? What are global clusters? What do global clusters do? To whom are global clusters accountable?

  13. Global Cluster Lead Agencies

  14. Country-Level Clusters General Humanitarian Knowledge General Humanitarian KnowledgeThe Cluster Approach When are country level clusters activated? New emergencies requiring multi-sectoral responses with participation of a wide range of international humanitarian actors Ongoing emergencies with Humanitarian Coordinators Contingency planning How are country level clusters activated? The HC/RC consults relevant partners, proposes leads for each major area and sends proposal to ERC ERC shares proposal with Global Cluster Lead Agencies, ensures agreement at global level and communicates agreement to HC/RC and partners within 24 hours of proposal HC/RC informs government and partners CLAs staff clusters from a standing roster When are country level clusters deactivated? Upon end of emergency phase HC agreement with partners Memo to ERC To whom are cluster leads accountable? HC/RC Partners? Donors, Population? When are country level clusters activated? How are country level clusters activated? When are country level clusters deactivated? To whom are cluster leads accountable?

  15. Cluster Leads - Terms of Reference What do country level clusters do? • Establish and maintain appropriate coordination mechanisms • Needs assessment and analysis • Planning, strategy, and response development • Emergency preparedness • Advocacy and resource mobilization • Monitoring and reporting • Inclusion of key humanitarian partners • Coordination with national/local authorities, local civil society, etc • Participatory and community-based approaches • Attention to priority cross-cutting issues (age, environment, gender, HIV and AIDS) • Application of standards • Training and capacity building • Provider of last resort Actions Coordinated Guidance for Coordination

  16. Inter-Cluster Coordination Example: “The Survival Strategy” There is a significant and beneficial intersection between mandates of FSC and other clusters, particularly Health, Nutrition and WASH. FSC works with those clusters to build on the Survival Strategy developed jointly by these clusters in Pakistan, following 2010 floods. The Survival Strategy aims at improved coordination and increased impact of synergetic programming, benefiting cluster members and constantly maintaining focus on the overall needs of the target population. Inter-Cluster Coordination • OCHA ensures facilitation of ICC • Normally: Cluster Coordinator represents cluster at relevant inter-cluster meetings

  17. IASC Humanitarian Coordination Structure Global Cluster Global level Emergency Relief Coordinator (ERC) OCHA Agency Head/Head of Global Cluster Lead Agency NGO Consortia Agency Head Agency Head Agency Head Global Cluster Coordinator NGO NGO Global Cluster Member Global Cluster Member Global Cluster Member Humanitarian Country Team National level National Govt HC or RC OCHA Cluster Cluster NGOs Country Representative Agency Country Representative Agency Country Representative/ Head of Cluster Lead Agency Agency Country Representative/ Head of Cluster Lead Agency Donors Inter Cluster Coordination Cluster Coordinator & IMO Cluster Coordinator & IMO Line Ministry Line Ministry Cluster Member Cluster Member Cluster Member Cluster Member Cluster Member Cluster Member = Coordination = Support = Reporting = Inter-cluster coordination

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