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Urban planning after humanitarian crises: Supporting local actors to take the lead

Urban planning after humanitarian crises: Supporting local actors to take the lead

February 22, 2017
by Victoria Maynard
English

How can humanitarian actors support local government to lead recovery and reconstruction planning after urban crises?  My current research project (with Elizabeth Parker, David Garcia…

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WUF: Self-recovery after urban disaster

WUF: Self-recovery after urban disaster

April 28, 2014
by Anna Konotchick
English

Who better to tell the story of what the international humanitarian community didn’t do after the 2010 earthquake in Haiti than the Haitian government? The…

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Learning "lessons learned" from past disasters

Learning “lessons learned” from past disasters

November 19, 2013
by David Lallemant
English

It is shocking how many “lessons learned” documents rehash the same lessons that had supposedly been learned already. The conclusion seems clear: we are very…

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Post-tsunami housing in Indonesia

From outputs to outcomes after the Indian Ocean Tsunami

October 10, 2013
by Victoria Maynard
English

Habitat for Humanity supported more than 25,000 families to repair or rebuild their homes following the Indian Ocean Tsunami – but what lasting effect did…

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Next CityGlobal Humanitarian Assistance  Humanitarian crises are messy and complicated – and so is the reporting. Where does the money come from? Where does it go? How does it get there? We provide clear, objective, evidence-based answers to help improve policy and practice.The Evaluating Humanitarian Action Guide supports evaluation specialists and non-specialists in every stage of an evaluation, from initial decision to final dissemination.
Introduction to ALNAP's Guide to Evaluating Humanitarian ActionEnrique Mendizabal of the Overseas Development Institute describes the Research and Policy in Development (RAPID) programme in this video produced by the IDRC's Pan-Asia Forum in 2009.Kirsty evidence is a brilliant blogger on evidence and policy in development.  She'd also like to be a ‘High Level Panel of Eminent Persons on Drinking Wine and Eating Cheesecake’ and draws great cartoons.
Kirsty evidence is a brilliant blogger on evidence and policy in development.  She'd also like to be a ‘High Level Panel of Eminent Persons on Drinking Wine and Eating Cheesecake’ and draws great cartoons.ODI’s Research and Development programme (RAPID) works to understand the relationship between research, policy and practice and promoting evidence-informed policy-making.Asian Disaster Preparedness Center
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