Child Protection Sub-Cluster Coordinator Training UGANDA – February 2014

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Child Protection Sub-Cluster Coordinator Training UGANDA – February 2014 Session 1

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Child Protection Sub-Cluster Coordinator Training UGANDA – February 2014. Session 1. Welcome and Hello…. As you wrap your piece of string around your finger Introduce yourself – name and organisation Any expectations for the training - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Child Protection Sub-Cluster Coordinator Training UGANDA – February 2014

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About the Training Team…

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Pre-Course Surveys

• On a scale from 1 to 10 where do you sit?

• Where do you think your country sits in regards to CPIE coordination, where 1 is least successful and 10 is most successful?

• Where do you stand in regards to confidence in coordination of CPIE, where 1 is not confident and 10 is very confident?

1 10

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Pre-Course Surveys

• On a scale from 1 to 10 where do you sit?

• Who feels they know and understand the Functions of Coordination, where 1 is not confident and 10 is most confident and you can explain them?

• How confident do you feel to take on a CP coordination role today?

1 10

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Training Objectives Develop a clear understanding of humanitarian reform and the cluster

approach;

Understand the functions, roles and responsibilities of sub-cluster coordination;

Develop strategies to encourage and develop strong collaboration and

partnerships;

Know how to access and use key tools and resources important to sub-cluster

coordination;

Have increased capacity to lead and support more effective sub-cluster

coordination.

- Focus is on CPIE Coordination

- Not CPIE Programming

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At the end of this training you will:Be fully familiar with:

– Humanitarian Reform and Cluster Approach

– Roles, responsibilities and accountabilities

– Management and monitoring processes

– Mandate and relevant work processes

– Tools, standards and sources of information

– Inter-cluster and inter-agency linkages

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At the end of this training you will:

Have strengthened skills in:

coordination, facilitation, conflict resolution, decision-making,

planning, capacity mapping, communication, advocacy and

resource mobilisation

Be better able to apply management skills:

for more effective cluster performance and achievement of results

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Monday

Tuesday

Wednesday

Thursday

Friday

Our 5 day agenda…

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Learning Agreement…

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The parking lot…

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What examples can you think of?

- What emergencies come to mind when you think of the your country context?

- Quick or slow onset- Conflict or non-conflict affected- Natural or man-made- Numbers affected?- Issues?

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Who’s Who in Emergencies?

Government

Humanitarian Coordinator (HC)

Humanitarian Country Team (HCT)

Affected communities

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Needs Assessments and Analysis

Strategic Planning

Resource Mobilisation

Implementation and Monitoring

Operational Review and Evaluation

Humanitarian Programme Cycle

Coordination IM

Preparedness

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Humanitarian Programme Cycle

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The Core Functions of Humanitarian Coordination

1. Supporting service delivery

2. Informing strategic decision-making of the HC/HCT for the humanitarian response

3. Planning and strategy development

4. Advocacy

5. Monitoring and reporting

6. Contingency planning/preparedness/capacity building

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What is the Purpose of Coordination?• Coordination is a tool used to improve the humanitarian

response. It is not a goal.

• Specifically, coordination must add value: – ensure a better quality of response– ensure a more timely response– ensure a less costly response– reduce waste

• The look of it may vary - It can be formal or informal

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Standard 1 - Coordination

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Presentation Stands –

1st Humanitarian reform and the Transformative agenda

2nd Global level CPWG

3rd Protection Coordination and Areas of Responsibility

4th Role of CP coordination Groups

5th Minimum Standards for Child Protection in Humanitarian Action

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‘Top Tips’ from the Global CPWG – Know about and respect their particular mandates – know it,

credit it, respect it and use it to help bring them into the group. When there is conflict, look at what you have in common. E.g.

child protection systems. Find the right person – In every organisation there is someone

who can move across their organisation effectively if they are ‘on board’.

In the global level CPWG, we have a group accountability. Members hold each other to account – you can do that too.

Money – Engagement gets rewarded.

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What does CPiE look like to you?

• In small groups discuss what you see when you think of CPiE

• Draw / write these on VIPP cards in one or two words

• In plenary, discuss the responses.

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What does the CP coordination structure look like in your context?

Illustrate in a diagram, including:

• Shared Leadership?• Linkage with pre-existing structures?• Structure: National, sub-national level? • Membership?• Staffing: Dedicated Coordinator? IMO?

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