Humanitarian Engineering : Innovative Approaches and Partnerships in Crisis Response

The overall purpose was to identify how reconstruction of infrastructure and provision ofessential services could be more effective,especially in countries, such as Lebanon andJordan, facing a massive refugee crisis driven by the war in Syria. The...

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Main Author: Tayler, Yolanda
Format: Brief
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2016/10/26836503/humanitarian-engineering-innovative-approaches-partnerships-crisis-response
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/25128
id okr-10986-25128
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-251282021-05-25T10:54:44Z Humanitarian Engineering : Innovative Approaches and Partnerships in Crisis Response Tayler, Yolanda reconstruction conflict fragile states infrastructure service delivery crisis response emergency management The overall purpose was to identify how reconstruction of infrastructure and provision ofessential services could be more effective,especially in countries, such as Lebanon andJordan, facing a massive refugee crisis driven by the war in Syria. The attention of the international community is increasingly focusedon maximizing effectiveness in crisis response. That is underscored in the communiqué of therecent G7 summit in Japan, and in the recent UN World Humanitarian Summit in Istanbul, which highlighted the need for the humanitarian and development communities to collaborate inaddressing the special needs of growing numbers of people facing long-term crisis conditions. TheCyprus workshop was thus very timely,especially in identifying priority steps tooptimize the critical role of procurement, onwhich the effectiveness of crisis response ultimately depends. The notion of “Humanitarian Engineering” and the International Humanitarian Engineering Partnership (HEP) were key themes at the workshop. Humanitarian Engineering” hasbeen defined in terms of enhancing human and community welfare, including in situations of chronic distress of large numbers of people (e.g.,emergencies and refugee crises) and encompassing research, design, manufacturing,construction and service delivery. HEP engages key stakeholders to develop innovative approaches and tools for moreeffective crisis response, in particular in the procurement dimension. The critical need for resources being developedby HEP was highlighted by a May 2016 surveyconducted across regions. Practical information about effective crisisresponse procurement that HEP can disseminate was illustrated at the workshop. Traditionally, development organizations haveoperated outside the emergency context.However, with the rise in long-lasting crises, itis critical to coordinate with local and regional stakeholders such as Non-governmental organization (NGOs), humanitarian agencies, and private sector, including small and medium enterprises (SMEs). The World Bank’s participation in HEP builds on its commitment to addressing the regionalcrisis including the MENA Financing Initiative to support refugees, host communities, and recovery and reconstruction. Partnering with stakeholders such as International Federation of Consulting Engineers (FIDIC) in the HEP initiative provides a strategic multiplier for the Bank’s efforts in crisis response. The dialogue at the workshop suggests key takeaways for the way forward. 2016-10-07T17:34:43Z 2016-10-07T17:34:43Z 2016-06 Brief http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2016/10/26836503/humanitarian-engineering-innovative-approaches-partnerships-crisis-response http://hdl.handle.net/10986/25128 English en_US MENA Knowledge and Learning Quick Notes Series;No. 157 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research Publications & Research :: Brief Middle East and North Africa Middle East North Africa
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
en_US
topic reconstruction
conflict
fragile states
infrastructure
service delivery
crisis response
emergency management
spellingShingle reconstruction
conflict
fragile states
infrastructure
service delivery
crisis response
emergency management
Tayler, Yolanda
Humanitarian Engineering : Innovative Approaches and Partnerships in Crisis Response
geographic_facet Middle East and North Africa
Middle East
North Africa
relation MENA Knowledge and Learning Quick Notes Series;No. 157
description The overall purpose was to identify how reconstruction of infrastructure and provision ofessential services could be more effective,especially in countries, such as Lebanon andJordan, facing a massive refugee crisis driven by the war in Syria. The attention of the international community is increasingly focusedon maximizing effectiveness in crisis response. That is underscored in the communiqué of therecent G7 summit in Japan, and in the recent UN World Humanitarian Summit in Istanbul, which highlighted the need for the humanitarian and development communities to collaborate inaddressing the special needs of growing numbers of people facing long-term crisis conditions. TheCyprus workshop was thus very timely,especially in identifying priority steps tooptimize the critical role of procurement, onwhich the effectiveness of crisis response ultimately depends. The notion of “Humanitarian Engineering” and the International Humanitarian Engineering Partnership (HEP) were key themes at the workshop. Humanitarian Engineering” hasbeen defined in terms of enhancing human and community welfare, including in situations of chronic distress of large numbers of people (e.g.,emergencies and refugee crises) and encompassing research, design, manufacturing,construction and service delivery. HEP engages key stakeholders to develop innovative approaches and tools for moreeffective crisis response, in particular in the procurement dimension. The critical need for resources being developedby HEP was highlighted by a May 2016 surveyconducted across regions. Practical information about effective crisisresponse procurement that HEP can disseminate was illustrated at the workshop. Traditionally, development organizations haveoperated outside the emergency context.However, with the rise in long-lasting crises, itis critical to coordinate with local and regional stakeholders such as Non-governmental organization (NGOs), humanitarian agencies, and private sector, including small and medium enterprises (SMEs). The World Bank’s participation in HEP builds on its commitment to addressing the regionalcrisis including the MENA Financing Initiative to support refugees, host communities, and recovery and reconstruction. Partnering with stakeholders such as International Federation of Consulting Engineers (FIDIC) in the HEP initiative provides a strategic multiplier for the Bank’s efforts in crisis response. The dialogue at the workshop suggests key takeaways for the way forward.
format Brief
author Tayler, Yolanda
author_facet Tayler, Yolanda
author_sort Tayler, Yolanda
title Humanitarian Engineering : Innovative Approaches and Partnerships in Crisis Response
title_short Humanitarian Engineering : Innovative Approaches and Partnerships in Crisis Response
title_full Humanitarian Engineering : Innovative Approaches and Partnerships in Crisis Response
title_fullStr Humanitarian Engineering : Innovative Approaches and Partnerships in Crisis Response
title_full_unstemmed Humanitarian Engineering : Innovative Approaches and Partnerships in Crisis Response
title_sort humanitarian engineering : innovative approaches and partnerships in crisis response
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2016
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2016/10/26836503/humanitarian-engineering-innovative-approaches-partnerships-crisis-response
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/25128
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