The Echo Chamber: Results, Management and the Humanitarian Effectiveness Agenda

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Author(s)
Fiori, J., Espada, F., Field, J. & Dicker, S.
Publication language
English
Pages
71pp
Date published
01 May 2016
Type
Books
Keywords
Governance, Principles & ethics, Standards
Countries
United Kingdom
Organisations
Save the Children

A major theme in humanitarian discourse over the last 25 years, effectiveness has been a central concern for those seeking to reform humanitarian practice and governance. Research on humanitarian effectiveness has taken the concept at face value, exploring what is effective, how to be more effective, and what the impact has been of individual initiatives. With effectiveness at the forefront of strategic discussions within Save the Children and across the humanitarian sector, the Humanitarian Affairs Team felt that there are important questions to be asked: Why has effectiveness become an organising ideal for humanitarians? What is the character of the ‘humanitarian effectiveness agenda’ that has been constructed of initiatives to improve humanitarian performance? Why is effectiveness understood in the way it is, and what are the implications of all this? The Echo Chamber and the accompanying Essays on Humanitarian Effectiveness are the culmination of a research project in partnership with the University of Manchester’s Humanitarian and Conflict Response Institute.