From Stockholm to Ottawa - A Progress Review of the Good Humanitarian Donorship Initiative

Author(s)
Harmer, A., Cotterrell, L. and Stoddard, A.
Publication language
English
Pages
8pp
Date published
01 Oct 2004
Type
Research, reports and studies
Keywords
Development & humanitarian aid, Funding and donors
Organisations
ODI

As financiers and increasingly as strategic actors in their own right, official donor governments exert a significant influence over the outcome of humanitarian action. Yet until a year ago, there was no consensus regarding how donor governments could and should use their influence and harmonise their procedures to improve humanitarian response. Donor policy and approaches to decision-making and resource allocation were criticised for being weakly articulated, ad hoc and uncoordinated. Driven by political interests rather than according to need, funding allocations were often inequitable, unpredictable and untimely in responding to crises. The humanitarian activities of donors were weakly linked into main- stream development administrations, and remained outside formal inter- governmental donor processes. Overall, there were weak account-
ability mechanisms and transparency in relation to donor action.