Strategic Communication Masterclass November 2011

39
Strategic Communication Masterclass November 2011 Communication by Humanitarians versus Humanitarian Communication The following points do not represent the speaker’s employer

description

Strategic Communication Masterclass November 2011. Communication by Humanitarians versus Humanitarian Communication. The following points do not represent the speaker’s employer. I. CONTEXT. Somalia – the (in) human s ide. 13.3 million people need urgent aid - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Strategic Communication Masterclass November 2011

Page 1: Strategic Communication Masterclass November 2011

Strategic Communication Masterclass November 2011

Communication by Humanitarians

versusHumanitarian

Communication The following points do not represent the speaker’s employer

Page 2: Strategic Communication Masterclass November 2011

I. CONTEXT

Page 3: Strategic Communication Masterclass November 2011

Somalia – the (in) human side

13.3 million people need urgent aid in Ethiopia, Kenya, Somalia and Djibouti

1.5 million Refugees across the Horn of Africa

900.000 Internally displaced people

30 % Malnutrition of children under 5 240 % Food price increase 50 % Livestock mortality

Page 4: Strategic Communication Masterclass November 2011

Perspectives 2011-2012

“The crisis is expected to worsen over the coming three months.

Recovery is not expected until next year, given the anticipated late and below-average harvests, the depletion of pasture and water and the high prices of food, water, and fuel.”

OCHA, Oct 2011

Page 5: Strategic Communication Masterclass November 2011

TODAY Rights violations

Violence

Poverty

CHILD

Page 6: Strategic Communication Masterclass November 2011

Facts are neutral Our Interpretation is not

Page 7: Strategic Communication Masterclass November 2011

Position A - Aid Agencies

“We are here to help the most vulnerable.

Saving lives is our only

objective.”

Page 8: Strategic Communication Masterclass November 2011

Position B – Host Government

“The humanitarian system feels like a form of competing

sovereignty. They assimilate partners and

coopt local NGOs.”

Page 9: Strategic Communication Masterclass November 2011

Position C – Non State Actors

“Relief workers are spies for foreign

countries. They come with

the agenda of their donor’s money.”

Page 10: Strategic Communication Masterclass November 2011

Position D – Population

“We see many big cars but no food.

Why do they not ask what we need? “

Page 11: Strategic Communication Masterclass November 2011
Page 12: Strategic Communication Masterclass November 2011

QUESTION

Which position can all factions agree on ?

Page 13: Strategic Communication Masterclass November 2011

Every Child has the right to eat, be protected from violence and cared

for when sick.

Page 14: Strategic Communication Masterclass November 2011

HER AGENDA?

Page 15: Strategic Communication Masterclass November 2011

COMMUNICATION is needed to nurture a shared vision

Page 16: Strategic Communication Masterclass November 2011

II. PRINCIPLES

Communication by

Humanitarians

Page 17: Strategic Communication Masterclass November 2011

1. Donor Issues

Political agendas and Humanitarian requirements are not linked

=> Aid is provided on needs basis (?) Need for guarantees to donors that their

aid falls not into the wrong hands…Limited leakages to armed groups, (which might once have been accepted) can now result in criminal prosecution (US/2001)

Page 18: Strategic Communication Masterclass November 2011

2. Critical Public Information

Continued strong communication on rights violations.

Pragmatic balance between advocacy needs and risk to staff, communities and operations.

Respect for their dignity.

Responsibility for our action. = No yellow-press portraying of human suffering

Page 19: Strategic Communication Masterclass November 2011

Human Dignity Political Attention

?

Page 20: Strategic Communication Masterclass November 2011

Changing (our) mindsets

Shifting from communication about situations

to

Advocacy with, by and for (underrepresented)

PEOPLE

Page 21: Strategic Communication Masterclass November 2011

3. Host Nation Relations & Advocacy

Respect of Host Nation rules and regulations are mirrored by a

Responsibility of the Host Nation to protect humanitarian actors and facilitate their work.

Balance to be found between ‘guest politeness’ and realities on the ground.

=> Relevance versus Access ?

Page 22: Strategic Communication Masterclass November 2011

4. Reporting & Disclosure

Transparent documentation of assistance - what was sent where, for whom and how.

No sharing of information that gives political, military or security advantages to one party.

No disclosure of beneficiary identities if this may put them in danger.

Page 23: Strategic Communication Masterclass November 2011

5. New Tools

Social Media

Represent a great tool to establish links between donor and recipient countries.

Are a tool not an end : Quality >< Quantity

M4D

Cell-phones as a channel to sensitize, collect data, and disseminate information.

Page 24: Strategic Communication Masterclass November 2011

Crises Mapping & Crowdsourcing

DEFINITIONS

Crises Mapping Using a variety of techniques to strategically map events so that interested parties can follow crises and respond, ideally in their emerging phases.

Crowdsourcing Outsourcing of tasks traditionally performed by specific individuals to an undefined group of people or communities (crowd) through an open call.

Page 25: Strategic Communication Masterclass November 2011

Crises Mapping & Crowdsourcing

Crises Mapping

Plus : Knowledge that allows to kick-start operations at early stages of an emergency.

=> Risk : Abuse by warring parties Crowdsourcing

Plus : Access to a large quantity of potentially adequate information.

=> Risk : Lack of reliability and references

Page 26: Strategic Communication Masterclass November 2011

Additional Approaches

Info As Aid

Make vital information accessible to populations in need (location of distributions, hygiene measures, identity of separated family members..)

Youth Empowerment

‘Use’ of young people as advocates for their rights and as authentic voices for the interaction with donors.

Page 27: Strategic Communication Masterclass November 2011

CCC x 3

Advocacy

Social Mobilisation

Communication for Development

Social & political engagement

Partnerships with NGOs & Civil Society

Behaviour at individual and community level

Page 28: Strategic Communication Masterclass November 2011

7. Security Issues

Proactive and systematic communication about impartiality is key to build trust.

Trust by the population has a double benefit := Shield against attacks = Access to areas in need

Balance to be found : Continued advocacy about civilian protection and needs without jeopardizing staff or communities.

Page 29: Strategic Communication Masterclass November 2011

8. Visibility Agreements

Donor recognition or visibility should be left to the discretion of aid agencies depending on circumstances. It can not condition funding.

=> Risk: Aborted ownership

Attention to abuse of visibility material by warring parties.

Page 30: Strategic Communication Masterclass November 2011

Conclusion

Humanitarian players must preserve in action and perception the drive of caring for the affected population.

They must remain at arm length from political and military interventions.

Neutrality and linked communication = Key to staff security and access.

Page 31: Strategic Communication Masterclass November 2011

III. OUTLOOK

Humanitarian

Communication

Page 32: Strategic Communication Masterclass November 2011

Equity Responsibility

Child Rights

Page 33: Strategic Communication Masterclass November 2011

WHAT

Development Emergency Aid

Politics & Security

RIGHTS

Page 34: Strategic Communication Masterclass November 2011

Patches or Painting?

Page 35: Strategic Communication Masterclass November 2011

WHO

Government Partners

Communitie

s

CHILD

Page 36: Strategic Communication Masterclass November 2011

Patting pieces – or figuring out biology?

Page 37: Strategic Communication Masterclass November 2011

HOW

Participation

Accountability

PARTNERS

Transparence

Page 38: Strategic Communication Masterclass November 2011

WHY COMMUNICATE

1. Nurture a shared vision for Humanity

2. Create a protective Neutrality-bubble

Page 39: Strategic Communication Masterclass November 2011

Purposeful Communication

YOU

THEM

WE