System Response to TEC Recommendations, Workshop

Publication language
English
Pages
3pp
Date published
01 Dec 2006
Type
Conference, training & meeting documents
Keywords
Evaluation-related, System-wide performance, Disasters, Tsunamis
Organisations
ALNAP

The TEC was designed to provide a system wide analysis, that is, to look at how the
whole system responded to the tsunami, rather than an analysis of individual parts
of the system or of the quality of individual programmes.


It did this in each of its five thematic reports, and in the Synthesis report. How are
we going to respond to what this report tells us? In this Workshop we will use the
findings and the recommendations of the Synthesis report to discuss how we can
pick up and proactively respond to what the report is telling us about the
performance of the humanitarian system and the challenges facing us. As the Joint
Evaluation of the Emergency Assistance to Rwanda provided an opportunity to push
forward some real changes in the humanitarian system, can we also make the
publication of the TEC such a renewed opportunity?


Currently, performance issues identified by the TEC are being addressed by a
collection of loosely aligned initiatives operating largely in an independent way.
There is currently no oversight facility to monitor and report on systemic progress
and a lack of evidence-based material to be able to make informed judgements. Who
is doing what, what progress is being made, and how performance might be
monitored, are among the issues that will be raised. The big question here is does a
systemic analysis requires a systemic response by the humanitarian community?
And if so, what would it look like?