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Second Meeting of the WHS Thematic Teams

21-23 April 2015, Bonn


The second meeting of the World Humanitarian Summit (WHS) thematic teams took place in
Bonn from 21 - 23 April 2015, hosted by the German Federal Ministry of Foreign Affairs. The
objectives were to develop a more ambitious vision, and narrative and sharpen the emerging
recommendations around a number of critical issues arising from the consultations. The
meeting involved 97 people from 44 organizations.

Vision and narrative


Participants developed what could be the building blocks of a vision for future humanitarian
action. This vision frames the WHS as a call to action for the global community to tackle the
collective failure to better protect and support people affected by crisis. Participants proposed
that the Summit should generate a new compact for humanity, the elements of which could
include: the affirmation by all stakeholders of common humanitarian values; an
acknowledgement that affected people have the right to ask for and receive assistance, and to
be safe; and a commitment that to deliver this is a collective responsibility. Underpinning this
new compact, participants proposed that there should be a number of action areas that lay out
a set of aspirations, milestones and recommendations, and catalyze concrete actions towards
achieving the overarching vision.

Emerging issues and recommendations from the consultations


Much of the meeting was dedicated to sharpening potential recommendations. These were
broken down into seven emerging issues common to the regional consultations so far. In
addition, the UN Secretary-General, addressing Member States the day before the Bonn
meeting, highlighted four critical areas for transformational change. This paper reflects how the
seven emerging issues discussed in Bonn fall into these four critical areas, and provides a small
sample of the recommendations that were discussed. It also covers cross-cutting issues.

i. Getting it right in conflicts


Confronting violations of international humanitarian law (IHL) and finding new
ways to protect and assist people in conflict
There is growing political paralysis in protecting civilians in conflict. Regional consultations have
echoed the Secretary-Generals call for the WHS to galvanize the international community to
improve respect for IHL and other bodies of law, hold accountable those who violate these
fundamental norms, and put protection at the heart of humanitarian action.

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Emerging recommendations
Generate new mechanisms to listen to the victims of atrocities, so their accounts are heard,
and explore opportunities to raise pressure on individual violators of IHL and those duty
bearers who fail in their responsibility to act.
Establish regional frameworks or instruments for protecting and assisting internally
displaced people, building on the experience of the Kampala convention.

ii. Financing for the future


Global action to address the widening funding shortfall
The Secretary-General has called for agreement on how to close the gap between growing
humanitarian needs and the resources available to meet them. This should involve
diversification, making efficiencies and finding solutions to make best use of limited
humanitarian finance.
Emerging recommendations
Make longer-term finance in protracted crises in conflict settings the standard.
Understand funding needs and the total resource availability through use of modelling and
increased transparency.
Improve the leveraging, triggering and deploying of the range of funding sources.
The recommendations of the Secretary-Generals High-level Panel on Humanitarian Financing
will help further to frame the Summit discussions and outcomes.

iii. New pathways to resilience


The Secretary-General emphasized the need to find new ways for the humanitarian community
to work with development and other actors so that people and communities become more
resilient to shocks and less dependent on humanitarian aid. Two of the emerging issues
discussed at Bonn fit into this area: the need to build local capacity to prepare and respond to
crises; and the need for new approaches to managing recurrent and protracted emergencies.

Localizing preparedness and response


The regional consultations to date have called for more discipline and predictability in triggering
regional and international humanitarian support, and have emphasized that international
humanitarian action should be driven by the concept of subsidiarity ensuring that it supports
local decisions and systems instead of supplanting them. To achieve this, the capacity of first line
responders at local and national level needs strengthening.
Emerging recommendations
Increase the level of finance going directly to local and national responders.
Make national coordination and response mechanisms the default in disasters.
Build a strong network of deployable capacities, especially in the Global South.

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Developing new approaches for managing recurrent and protracted crises


Consultations have emphasized the need to re-think the way protracted and recurrent crises are
addressed. This should build on experience from the resilience agenda, including common multihazard risk analysis, scaling-up safety nets and finding solutions to protracted displacement.
Emerging recommendations
Generate a basic crisis cover for the bottom billion, with clear delineation of responsibilities
between different actors for different levels of risk, to guarantee the minimum
requirements for preserving life and dignity.
Agree a compact between humanitarian and development actors that will herald a new
system of collective crisis management.

iv. Fit for the future: a more inclusive, effective and diverse
humanitarian system
The Secretary-General called for humanitarian actors to continue the process of reform to
enhance operational effectiveness, building on the elements of the Inter-Agency Standing
Committee Transformative Agenda. Three of the emerging issues discussed at Bonn provide
recommendations on creating a more inclusive, diverse and effective humanitarian system,
capable of responding rapidly to what the future may hold: adapting the humanitarian system to
new contexts, actors and challenges; and, ensuring affected people, particularly women, have a
stronger voice and influence over humanitarian action; and creating an enabling environment
for investment in innovation.

Adapting the humanitarian system to new contexts, actors and challenges


Regional consultations have emphasized that the international humanitarian system cannot be
one-size-fits-all, but needs to adapt to different contexts. International actors should be clear
where they have comparative advantage and how they should complement local, national and
regional actors and strategies, so making international interventions a true safety net of last
resort.
Emerging recommendations
Develop a results framework to assess outcomes in different contexts and establish an
independent impact evaluation group to monitor this.
Devolve decision making on preparedness and response planning and management to the
regional and national level.

Ensuring affected people, particularly women, have a stronger voice and


influence over humanitarian action
The regional consultations to date have called for systemic changes to ensure that affected
people are much more meaningfully engaged in decision-making for humanitarian preparedness
and response.

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Emerging recommendations
Gain commitments from donors and humanitarian organizations to deliver business
practices that engage communities and increase accountability to affected people.
Make better use of data and build on innovations from the private and development sectors
to engage affected people in determining the shape of humanitarian action and assessing its
performance.

Creating an enabling environment and investment for innovation


The right environment, resources and partnerships are required to generate innovation for
tackling the major challenges faced in the future. Current investment in research and
development in the humanitarian sector falls below minimum best practice.
Emerging recommendations
Launch a major initiative to stimulate innovation, including a high-level advisory group and
a public-private fund.
Agree on shared ethics, principles and standards to guide innovation.
Scale up the use of multi-sector cash transfers.

Cross-cutting issues
Participants also discussed four cross-cutting issues that have emerged from the consultations.

Closing the gap: gender equality in humanitarian action


Gender equality must be a central part of the Summit deliberations and outcomes, and
mainstreamed across its recommendations. The potential of women and girls must be tapped
into in humanitarian response; as well as addressing their specific needs and vulnerabilities.
Emerging recommendations
Make funding conditional on applying gender equality across the program cycle.
Create a formal, independent monitoring mechanism to ensure accountability for the
implementation of normative frameworks on gender equality.

Cities in crisis: adapting to an urban world


Rapid urbanization is increasing the scale and complexity of crises. Cities also accommodate the
majority of displaced people, who become invisible survivors of conflict and disaster. There is a
need to get ready urgently for these growing challenges.
Emerging recommendations
Adopt a new city-based approach to crisis management.
Form new partnerships for managing urban crises, notably in support of local and municipal
authorities, but also with the private sector.

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The power of business: stimulating its role in emergencies


Crisis management would benefit from greater private sector engagement. This in turn should
increase the impact of the response on the local economy, so speeding recovery.
Emerging recommendation
Create coordination and regulatory frameworks for engaging the private sector in
preparedness, response and resilience at national and sub-national levels.

Understanding future risk


Calibrating the risk of future crises and identifying new risks would greatly enhance response. As
the majority of crises are predictable and modelling is becoming ever more sophisticated
particularly in the insurance sector, this should be increasingly feasible.
Emerging recommendations
Develop a biannual analysis of humanitarian risk, involving leading experts from science,
defense and private sectors.
Establish a new advisory group to support the UN Emergency Relief Coordinator in
identifying new humanitarian risks.

Conclusion and next steps


The Bonn meeting represented an important step in taking stock of the outcomes from the
consultation process to date and starting the process of sharpening emerging
recommendations. This process will continue. Emerging recommendations will be tested in the
remaining consultations, and then distilled together with the findings of the overall consultation
process into a synthesis report. This will be discussed at the Thematic Consultation in Berlin in
September and be the main input to the Global Consultation in Geneva in October 2015.

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