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Saturday November 21, 2009

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Past Event

A BROOKINGS-BERN PROJECT ON INTERNAL DISPLACEMENT EVENT

Humanitarian Response Index 2009: Clarifying Donor Priorities

Foreign Aid, Foreign Assistance Reform, Internal Displacement, Human Rights, Natural Disasters


Event Summary

Every year, humanitarian crises threaten the lives and livelihoods of over 250 million people worldwide. Whether caused by conflict, climate change or the global financial crisis, increasing numbers of people will need humanitarian assistance in the coming years. To increase the quality and effectiveness of their humanitarian assistance, donor governments must make the best use of their resources, knowledge and capabilities to respond to humanitarian challenges.

Event Information

When

Tuesday, November 10, 2009
3:00 PM to 5:00 PM

Where

Falk Auditorium
The Brookings Institution
1775 Massachusetts Ave., NW
Washington, DC
Map

Event Materials

Contact: Brookings Office of Communications

E-mail: events@brookings.edu

Phone: 202.797.6105

On November 10, the Brookings-Bern Project on Internal Displacement will host the launch of the Development Assistance Research Associates (DARA) Humanitarian Response Index 2009 (HRI), which helps donor governments ensure that humanitarian assistance has the greatest possible impact for people suffering the effects of crises and disasters. Following a presentation of the Index’s findings by Silvia Hidalgo, Executive Director of DARA, Ross Mountain, who has served for the last five years as United Nations resident and humanitarian coordinator in the Democratic Republic of Congo, and Senior Fellow Elizabeth Ferris, co-director of the Brookings-Bern Project, will discuss HRI’s findings and its potential impact in the field, reflecting on their own experiences.

After the program, panelists will take audience questions. A reception will follow the event.

Transcript

Strobe Talbott: Humanitarian response is, to put it very bluntly, a major enterprise, I would even say a very big and important business. It has to be given the number of crises around the world: Sri Lanka; the Democratic Republic of Congo, which Mr. Mountain knows very well indeed; Pakistan; and hundreds of other places that rarely make the headlines and yet are the scene of terrible human suffering.

Globally, humanitarian response costs about $18 billion a year, at least that’s what it cost last year, and employs a quarter of a million people. In Darfur alone, the international community is spending about a billion dollars a year and relying on over 13,000 humanitarian workers. Donor governments have a double responsibility, both to their own citizens who, of course, are also taxpayers, and to the recipients of humanitarian assistance.

Participants

Introduction

Strobe Talbott

President, The Brookings Institution

Moderator

José María Figueres Olsen

Former President of Costa Rica

Panelists

Elizabeth Ferris

Senior Fellow, Foreign Policy

Ross Mountain

Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator, Deputy Special Representative of the UN Secretary-General in the Democratic Republic of the Congo
United Nations

Silvia Hidalgo

Executive Director
DARA

Philip Tamminga

Humanitarian Response Outreach Director
DARA


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