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국회도서관 홈으로 정보검색 소장정보 검색

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Title page

Contents

Acknowledgments 3

Acronyms/Glossary 6

Executive summary 7

1. Introduction: project aims 8

2. Practitioner and organisational programmatic experience within the contexts of climate hazards and conflict 11

2.1. Analysis that informs programming 11

2.2. Current response to humanitarian needs 16

2.3. Moving from crisis to resilience 24

3. Conclusions and recommendations 31

4. Recommendations 34

Consider how an individual strategy fits into a broader plan of addressing food and nutritional security 34

Programming will need to reflect the local drivers of food and nutritional insecurity and the local barriers to solutions 34

Programming needs to be informed by analysis that captures the problem, but what this analysis will and can inform needs to be clear from the outset 34

Programming should not aim to make predictions, but should help people to manage uncertainty 35

Local people need to be in the room, as equal partners 35

References 37

Figures

Figure 1. Mali seasonal calendar 18

Figure 2. South Sudan seasonal calendar 19

Figure 3. Somalia seasonal calendar 20

Figure 4. Integrated Phase Food Security Classification (IPC) Acute Food Insecurity Scale 22

Boxes

Box 1. First assessment - lived experiences relating to food and nutrition security in Mali, Somalia and South Sudan 9

Box 2. Existing practitioner and organisational experience 10

Box 3. Building Resilient Communities in Somalia (BRCiS) 17

Box 4. Food Security Livelihood(FSL) cluster 25

Box 5. Sene Yiriwa 26