Humanitarian-Development Coherence in WASH or WRM Programs
What actions can enhance coherence between water, sanitation & hygiene and water resources management programming in shock-affected contexts?
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The purpose of this technical brief is to provide an overview of actions to enhance the coherence between humanitarian, stabilization, and development approaches to water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) or water resources management (WRM) programming in shock-affected contexts. The brief is intended for humanitarian, stabilization, and development actors both within and outside of USAID and proposes actionable steps and practical programming ideas to support the design and implementation of WASH or WRM programming in countries prone to natural disasters, affected by conflict, and/ or political instability. The brief is aligned with the USAID Water and Development Plan under the U.S. Global Water Strategy, the Agency’s Resilience Policy, and the U.S. Strategy to Prevent Conflict and Promote Stability.
Key takeaways include:
- Develop a common understanding of the mandate, priorities, and geographic areas where WASH or WRM actors are working. Anyone motivated can jumpstart this first step; however, an influential broker is eventually needed to play an ongoing, facilitative role that would ideally include joint analysis and planning, as well as harmonized advocacy that takes advantage of each actors’ comparative advantages.
- There is not a one-size-fits-all approach and opportunities may range from implementing complementary, yet separate programs in the same geographic area to achieve mutually agreed objectives, to implementing integrated programs that blend humanitarian, stabilization, and development approaches within a single activity.
- Promote development approaches that can facilitate emergency response when needed. In shock-affected areas, development approaches are still possible, but development actors will need to build flexibility into activities and adaptive management will be essential.
- Create an enabling environment for long-term development when addressing shocks. When feasible, humanitarian interventions should be complementary to and reinforce existing or nascent WASH services and WRM authorities and approaches.