- 27. Cash
- 28. Advocacy
- 1. Role of advocacy in an emergency
- 2. Critical steps for advocacy
- 3. Approaches to advocacy
- 4. How advocacy fits in CARE’s emergency response
- 5. Rights-based frameworks for advocacy
- 6. Activating and coordinating advocacy in CARE
- 7. Issues identification and prioritisation
- 8. Criteria for deciding to engage in advocacy
- 9. Developing an advocacy strategy and taking action.
- 9.1 Different levels of planning
- 9.2 Key questions and strategy format
- 9.3 Problem analysis
- 9.4 Goal and objectives
- 9.5 Rationale for CARE’s engagement
- 9.6 Target audience
- 9.7 Identifying allies and opponents
- 9.8 Advocacy messages
- 9.9 Tools and actions
- 9.10 Opportunities and events
- 9.11 Human and financial resources
- 9.12 Risk management
- 9.13 Monitoring and evaluation
- 10. Advocacy in relation to non-presence emergency operations
- 11. Annexes
- 29. Conflict Sensitivity
- 1. Introduction
- 2. What to do: Response options
- 3. What not to do: Do no harm and other common mistakes
- 4. When and where to get specialist help
- 5. CARE’s capacity and experience
- 6. Annexes
- 7. Other resources
- 30. Participation
- 31. Protection
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Assessment checklist
- 3. What to do: Response options
- 4. What not to do: Do no harm and other common mistakes
- 5. When and where to get specialist help
- 6. CARE’s policy commitments
- 7. CARE’s capacity and experience
- 8. Annexes
- 9. Other resources
- 32. Quality and Accountability
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Definitions
- 3. CARE’s Humanitarian Accountability Framework (HAF)
- 4. Commitments on Humanitarian Quality and Accountability
- 5. Humanitarian Performance Targets
- 6. HAF Accountability System
- 7. Quality and Accountability (Q&A) Roles and Responsibilities
- 8. Q&A Checklist for COs
- 9. Q&A Resourcing
- 10. Q&A Technical Support
- 11. Annexes
- 33. PSEA
- 34. DRR
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Assessment checklist
- 3. What to do: Response options
- 4. What not to do: Do no harm and other common mistakes
- 5. When and where to get specialist help
- 6. CARE’s policy commitments
- 7. CARE’s capacity and experience
- 8. Annexes
- 9. Other resources
- 35. Environment and Disasters
- 36. Policy Framework
- 37. EPP
- 38. Humanitarian Space
- 39. Civil Military Relations
- 40. Humanitarian Coordination
- 1. Introduction
- 1.1 What humanitarian coordination is
- 1.2 Why humanitarian coordination is important
- 1.3 Types of humanitarian coordination mechanisms
- 1.4 UN-led humanitarian coordination mechanisms
- 1.4.1 Humanitarian reform
- 1.4.2 What the cluster system is
- 1.4.3 Cluster leads
- 1.4.4 Provider of last resort
- 1.4.5 SAGS and TWIGS
- 1.4.6 The role of NGOs in the cluster systems
- 1.4.7 Humanitarian financing and funding mechanisms
- 1.4.8 Common humanitarian services
- 1.4.9 Responsibilities of humanitarian common services providers
- 1.4.10 Global Emergency Directors’ Group
- 1.5 Host government coordination
- 1.6 NGO coordination
- 2. CARE’s policy
- 3. Applying the policy in practice
- 4. Annexes
- 5. Other resources
- 1. Introduction
- 41. HIV
- 42. Information management
- 1. Role of information management in an emergency
- 2. Critical steps in information management
- 3. Emergency alerts
- 4. Situation reports (sitreps)
- 5. Internal information management at the Country Office level
- 6. Information management at CARE International level
- 7. Handling enquiries
- 8. Information support for media and fundraising work
- 9. Meeting management
- 10. External information sharing
- 11. Documentation and archival
- 12. Remote support for information management
- 13. Infrastructure requirements
- 14. Operations rooms
- 14. Operations rooms
- 15. Additional guidelines for non-presence operations
- 16. Annexes
- 17. Other resources
9.7.1 Collaboration on humanitarian advocacy
Collaboration allows for flexibility of roles. One organisation may choose publicly to report and denounce violations, while another may pass on information confidentially. Some may choose to engage in active advocacy while others work ‘behind the scenes’ to protect and promote rights, often by maintaining a presence with people at risk.
Source: Inter-Agency Standing Committee (IASC) 2002. Growing the sheltering tree: Protecting rights through humanitarian action.