Internationals did nothing to protect us during the war. They promised things to us but did nothing – we could only depend on ourselves
Publications
Publications
Drawing on our research into how people respond to crisis and humanitarian funding flows, as well as our experience implementing sclr, L2GP contributes to a number of debates in the aid sector aiming to ensure that citizen and community priorities, perspectives and agency are heard and taken into account.HPN 84
Survivor and Community-led crisis response: practical experience and learning
Humanitarian Exchange 79
Local funding flows and leadership: recent trends in 10 major humanitarian responses
Humanitarian Exchange 79
Learning from survivor- and community-led response in Haiti
May 2021Justin Corbett, Nils Carstensen and Simone DiVicenzMay 2021Christian Els and Henrik FröjmarkMay 2021Charlotte Greene, Chris Ball, Foster Javin, Frontceay Panier, Jonides Villarson, Naomie Beaujour, Nathalie Töpperwien Blom, Simone Di VincenzThis paper, published by the Humanitarian Practice Network, distils ten years’ experience of sclr in natural disasters, armed conflict, persistent poverty and social unrest. By presenting evidence from crisis contexts around the world the paper demonstrates the necessity of letting local people and communities take control of the response and shows how it can done in practice. The paper is a call to action for implementation of truly locally-led responses across the aid sector.This paper distils findings from L2GP’s Humanitarian Economy project to examine humanitarian funding flows since the Grand Bargain and ask what meaningful change has been made towards transfer of resources in the five years since the commitments began.
Lessons from pilots supporting community-led resonse to crisis through Linking Preparedness Response and Reslience (LPRR), with support from L2GP, Christian Aid and others.
HPN 84 – Arabic
HPN 84 – English
HPN 84 – French
HPN 84 – Spanish
Humanitarian Exchange
Humanitarian Exchange
HPN 72
Local to Global Protection in Myanmar, Sudan, South Sudan and Zimbabwe
February 2012
Ashley South and Simon Harrigin, with Justin Corbett, Richard Horsey, Susanne Kempel, Henrik Fröjmark and Nils Carstensen
This special publication from the Humanitarian Practice Network brings together L2GP’s early research into community response to crisis, drawing together the key learnings that later helped build the sclr approach to resource individuals and communities to respond to crisis. The HPN 72 has also been instrumental in inspiring a significant number of humanitarian protection actors to include community perspectives into their protection work.
HPN 72
HPN 84
Survivor and Community-led crisis response: practical experience and learning
May 2021Justin Corbett, Nils Carstensen and Simone DiVicenzThis paper distils findings from L2GP’s Humanitarian Economy project to examine humanitarian funding flows since the Grand Bargain and ask what meaningful change has been made towards transfer of resources in the five years since the commitments began.
HPN 84
Humanitarian Exchange 79
Local funding flows and leadership: recent trends in 10 major humanitarian responses
May 2021Christian Els and Henrik FröjmarkThis paper, published by the Humanitarian Practice Network, distils ten years’ experience of sclr in natural disasters, armed conflict, persistent poverty and social unrest. By presenting evidence from crisis contexts around the world the paper demonstrates the necessity of letting local people and communities take control of the response and shows how it can done in practice. The paper is a call to action for implementation of truly locally-led responses across the aid sector.
Humanitarian Exchange
Humanitarian Exchange 79
Learning from survivor- and community-led response in Haiti
May 2021Charlotte Greene, Chris Ball, Foster Javin, Frontceay Panier, Jonides Villarson, Naomie Beaujour, Nathalie Töpperwien Blom, Simone Di VincenzThis paper, published by the Humanitarian Practice Network, distils ten years’ experience of sclr in natural disasters, armed conflict, persistent poverty and social unrest. By presenting evidence from crisis contexts around the world the paper demonstrates the necessity of letting local people and communities take control of the response and shows how it can done in practice. The paper is a call to action for implementation of truly locally-led responses across the aid sector.
Humanitarian Exchange
HPN 72
Local to Global Protection in Myanmar, Sudan, South Sudan and Zimbabwe
February 2012Ashley South and Simon Harrigin, with Justin Corbett, Richard Horsey, Susanne Kempel, Henrik Fröjmark and Nils CarstensenThis special publication from the Humanitarian Practice Network brings together L2GP’s early research into community response to crisis, drawing together the key learnings that later helped build the sclr approach to resource individuals and communities to respond to crisis. The HPN 72 has also been instrumental in inspiring a significant number of humanitarian protection actors to include community perspectives into their protection work.