Donor Approaches to Risk in Fragile and Conflict Affected States. Synthesis Report.
The findings are based on evidence from 4 case study countries: DR Congo, South Sudan, Somalia and Nepal
Abstract
This report is a comparative study of donor of approaches to risk management in fragile and conflict affected states. The findings are based on evidence from 4 case study countries: Democratic Republic of Congo, South Sudan, Somalia and Nepal (and additional examples drawn from Myanmar, Afghanistan and Haiti). The study was commissioned by the INCAF Task Team on Implementation and Reform, which identified a need to complement ongoing policy level work on risk management with evidence from the field on how donors manage risk in practice and identification of innovative practices.
The research set out to address three questions:
(1) How do donors act in response to various categories of risk, and
how does this affect the impact of aid programmes?
(2) What factors explain why they respond to risks in these ways?
(3) What examples can be found of effective risk management practices
in different countries and what explains their success?
This report begins with a brief explanation of risk and risk management concepts, and the methodology used in the study. The next sections (4-6) then examine case study evidence on each of the three research questions listed above. The study concludes with general recommendations on how donors can strengthen risk management in fragile and conflict affected states.
Citation
Williams, G.; Burke, A.; Wille, C. Donor Approaches to Risk in Fragile and Conflict Affected States. Synthesis Report. The Policy Practice Limited, Brighton, UK (2013) 63 pp.
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