Cooperation between International Organizations in Complex Emergencies in Eastern Africa: the Views of Danish Practitioners on Cooperation from an Expert Seminar

Research output: Book/ReportReportResearchpeer-review

Documents

  • Full Text

    Final published version, 1.7 MB, PDF document

  • Flemming Pradhan-Blach
  • Gary John Schaub Jr
  • Matthew LeRiche
This report addresses the challenges of cooperation between international organizations in complex emergencies in fragile states of East Africa. An expert seminar was conducted on the basis of a paper on the subject to discuss problems, challenges, and possible solutions. Denmark and the rest of the international community often face the problem of poor coordination, lack of cooperation, and de-confliction of assistance in such situations. Countries and organizations are aware of these problems and have undertaken efforts to resolve them, but it remains insufficient. Attempts to better coordinate have been made at various levels—between governments, between organizations, and between local actors. Some improvements in effectiveness are being observed. Since 2005, Danish development policy has tried to take these efforts into account, as do policies that are still under development. The necessity of a comprehensive, coordinated, and fully analysed approach are among the lessons learned. Local ownership and involvement is a must, and one way of doing so could be to follow the “New Deal” principles. The Danish approach is currently leaning in this direction, and Denmark must work to influence its partners to use this approach to achieve the best results possible in complex emergencies.
Original languageEnglish
Place of PublicationCopenhagen
PublisherCenter for militære studier
Number of pages29
ISBN (Print)9788773937181
Publication statusPublished - Jan 2014

ID: 109769504