Addressing the ‘doctrine gap’: professionalising the use of Information Communication Technologies in humanitarian action

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Author(s)
Raymond, N.A. and Harrity, C.S.
Publication language
English
Pages
5pp
Date published
01 Apr 2016
Type
Articles
Keywords
Information Management, Innovation
Organisations
Humanitarian Practice Network (HPN)

This generation of humanitarian actors will be defined by the actions they take in response to the challenges and opportunities of the digital revolution. At this critical moment in the history of humanitarian action, success depends on humanitarians recognising that the use of information communication technologies (ICTs) must become a core competency for humanitarian action. Treated in the past as a boutique sub-area of humanitarian practice, the central role that they now play has made the collection, analysis and dissemination of data derived from ICTs and other sources a basic skill required of humanitarians in the twenty-first century. ICT use must now be seen as an essential competence with critical implications for the efficiency and effectiveness of humanitarian response.