Children and the 2004 Indian Ocean Tsunami: Evaluation of UNICEF's Response in Indonesia (2005-2008)

Author(s)
UNICEF
Publication language
English
Pages
101pp
Date published
01 Nov 2009
Publisher
UNICEF
Type
Evaluation reports
Keywords
Children & youth, Disasters, Protection, human rights & security, Response and recovery
Countries
Indonesia

The international response to the Indian Ocean tsunami in Indonesia – the hardest hit country -- was among the most ambitious and well-funded responses to a natural disaster. UNICEF’s emergency response and early recovery phases have been well documented through evaluation, but there has been no systematic evaluation of the recovery and early development phases. Focusing mainly on the sectors where UNICEF had extensive involvement -- child protection; basic education; child and maternal health and nutrition; and water, sanitation and hygiene -- the present evaluation asks the following questions: In the spirit of building back better, what evidence is there indicating that the response (2005-2008) has resulted in better institutional capacities, systems, services and enhanced the wellbeing and rights of children compared to the pre-tsunami situation? What role has been played by UNICEF’s programmes in achieving these results? What conclusions can be drawn regarding UNICEF’s programme performance? In addition, the evaluation draws lessons and recommendations for each sector and general lessons for recovery/transition programming.