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Inclusion of Evidence-Based Approach to Humanitarian Needs Assessment in Flash Appeals

Kukkonen, Esa LU (2018) VBRM15 20181
Division of Risk Management and Societal Safety
Abstract
According to the humanitarian principle of impartiality, decisions on what to fund in humanitarian crises should be based on a clear identification and prioritization of need. However, both the donors and responders have been reported to not act solely based on the needs. Previous studies indicate that skepticism around the quality of humanitarian needs assessments, especially in Flash Appeal documents concerning funding requests for responding to sudden- onset emergencies, is often given as one of the reasons. Adoption of an evidence- based approach to needs assessments is believed to increase credibility of identification and prioritization of needs and create accountability to respond to the needs of the highest priority. By reviewing... (More)
According to the humanitarian principle of impartiality, decisions on what to fund in humanitarian crises should be based on a clear identification and prioritization of need. However, both the donors and responders have been reported to not act solely based on the needs. Previous studies indicate that skepticism around the quality of humanitarian needs assessments, especially in Flash Appeal documents concerning funding requests for responding to sudden- onset emergencies, is often given as one of the reasons. Adoption of an evidence- based approach to needs assessments is believed to increase credibility of identification and prioritization of needs and create accountability to respond to the needs of the highest priority. By reviewing all Flash Appeals launched in 2017, the purpose of the thesis is to provide a timely snapshot of how the evidence-based approach is applied to needs assessments in Flash Appeals, what are the current challenges and what are the opportunities for developing the concept. To answer the questions, the study utilizes a literature review, a document analysis and a systematizing expert interview with a representative from UN OCHA’s Coordinated Assessment Support Section.
The findings indicate that a clear and well-established definition of the evidence-based approach in a humanitarian context remains unconcluded. Based on the results, the author suggests the following definition: “The evidence-based approach in humanitarian action means the use of credible and transparent evidence to support identification and prioritization of needs, arguments for how the needs can be addressed and why the response works in a given context”. The concept is concluded as inclusion of seven components that can be considered as evidence to support claims in Flash Appeals: context analysis, use of baseline data, transparent sourcing and referencing, transparent methodology, clear terminology and definitions, data disaggregation and data triangulation. Using these components as criteria for evaluation, the results reveal that inclusion of evidence is weak in each Flash Appeal. Identified challenges include lack of capacity and knowledge how to integrate evidence in current practices but also lack of incentives to do so. The study concludes that evidence base in Flash Appeals can be enhanced by setting an agreed-upon definition for the evidence- based approach in the humanitarian context, by increasing preparedness among the agencies developing the appeals through training and simply by paying more attention to transparency of the information used to develop and present requests for funding. (Less)
Popular Abstract
The evidence-based approach is believed to increase the validity of the identification and prioritization of needs in humanitarian needs assessments and response activities. This research studied how the concept is currently applied in developing Flash Appeals.

According to the humanitarian principle of impartiality, decisions on what to fund in humanitarian crises should be based on a clear identification and prioritization of need. However, previous studies show that the donors funding the crises are sceptical about the quality of the analyses done by the international humanitarian agencies. Thus, they may not allocate their resources only according to the needs of highest priority, but also in compliance with pre-determined... (More)
The evidence-based approach is believed to increase the validity of the identification and prioritization of needs in humanitarian needs assessments and response activities. This research studied how the concept is currently applied in developing Flash Appeals.

According to the humanitarian principle of impartiality, decisions on what to fund in humanitarian crises should be based on a clear identification and prioritization of need. However, previous studies show that the donors funding the crises are sceptical about the quality of the analyses done by the international humanitarian agencies. Thus, they may not allocate their resources only according to the needs of highest priority, but also in compliance with pre-determined parameters that may contradict the needs. Flash Appeals, usually led by a UN-agency, are instruments for funding responses to sudden-onset emergencies. These appeals act as a window to an emergency by uncovering information about an emergency and describing the impacts and corresponding needs arising from a disruption. These documents are ideally pushed out 5-7 days after the onset of an emergency, which creates a pressure to compromise between the quality of information provided in the appeals and how quickly the documents are launched. As one of the results, time was found as a major constraint, when developing such appeals and building a strong evidence base.

Based on the findings, many scholars and humanitarian organisations define “evidence”. However, the broader concept of “evidence-based approach”, with its roots in the field of public health, has not been well-defined. Based on a comprehensive literature review focusing on the evidence-based approach and humanitarian needs assessments, a definition was established by combining the core elements of the two concepts: “The evidence-based approach in humanitarian action means the use of evidence, as of relevant, credible and transparent information, to identify and prioritize needs, and argument how the needs can be addressed and why the response works in a given context”. In essence, transparency can be seen as an inherent property of evidence. In practice, an evidence base within a Flash Appeal was in this thesis defined as the inclusion of seven interlinked components: context analysis, use of baseline data, transparent methodology, transparent sourcing and referencing, transparent terminology and definitions, data disaggregation and data triangulation. All the UN-led appeals from 2017, a total of six documents, were reviewed through a document analysis for inclusion of evidence. Using a specifically created set of evaluation criteria, utilizing the seven themes as a framework, the evidence base in Flash Appeals was found to be weak, however some pieces of evidence are provided.

The findings from literature review, document analysis and interview with an expert from UN OCHA indicate that by explicitly providing reasoning of how the conclusions of a needs assessment were drawn, what information was used and the limitations of the assessment, credibility of the assessments within the Flash Appeals could be increased. This in turn, entails developing capacities in preparedness among the agencies developing Flash Appeals by training how to apply the concept in practice and ultimately agreeing upon what the evidence-based approach means in the humanitarian context. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
Kukkonen, Esa LU
supervisor
organization
course
VBRM15 20181
year
type
H2 - Master's Degree (Two Years)
subject
keywords
Evidence, evidence base, evidence-based approach, Flash Appeal, funding humanitarian crises, humanitarian needs assessment, sudden-onset emergencies
language
English
id
8949003
date added to LUP
2018-06-18 09:57:31
date last changed
2018-06-18 09:57:31
@misc{8949003,
  abstract     = {{According to the humanitarian principle of impartiality, decisions on what to fund in humanitarian crises should be based on a clear identification and prioritization of need. However, both the donors and responders have been reported to not act solely based on the needs. Previous studies indicate that skepticism around the quality of humanitarian needs assessments, especially in Flash Appeal documents concerning funding requests for responding to sudden- onset emergencies, is often given as one of the reasons. Adoption of an evidence- based approach to needs assessments is believed to increase credibility of identification and prioritization of needs and create accountability to respond to the needs of the highest priority. By reviewing all Flash Appeals launched in 2017, the purpose of the thesis is to provide a timely snapshot of how the evidence-based approach is applied to needs assessments in Flash Appeals, what are the current challenges and what are the opportunities for developing the concept. To answer the questions, the study utilizes a literature review, a document analysis and a systematizing expert interview with a representative from UN OCHA’s Coordinated Assessment Support Section.
The findings indicate that a clear and well-established definition of the evidence-based approach in a humanitarian context remains unconcluded. Based on the results, the author suggests the following definition: “The evidence-based approach in humanitarian action means the use of credible and transparent evidence to support identification and prioritization of needs, arguments for how the needs can be addressed and why the response works in a given context”. The concept is concluded as inclusion of seven components that can be considered as evidence to support claims in Flash Appeals: context analysis, use of baseline data, transparent sourcing and referencing, transparent methodology, clear terminology and definitions, data disaggregation and data triangulation. Using these components as criteria for evaluation, the results reveal that inclusion of evidence is weak in each Flash Appeal. Identified challenges include lack of capacity and knowledge how to integrate evidence in current practices but also lack of incentives to do so. The study concludes that evidence base in Flash Appeals can be enhanced by setting an agreed-upon definition for the evidence- based approach in the humanitarian context, by increasing preparedness among the agencies developing the appeals through training and simply by paying more attention to transparency of the information used to develop and present requests for funding.}},
  author       = {{Kukkonen, Esa}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  note         = {{Student Paper}},
  title        = {{Inclusion of Evidence-Based Approach to Humanitarian Needs Assessment in Flash Appeals}},
  year         = {{2018}},
}