Transcript Document

Do No Harm (DNH) Tool: 101
Felicia Genet
9/26/2013
“ Do No Harm” Tool
Authority: The Do No Harm Handbook ( The Framework for Analyzing the
Impact of Assistance on Conflict, Collaborative Development Action Inc,CDA
Learning Objectives:
• History
• DNA Approach
• Framework
1. Understanding the Context of Conflict
2. Analyzing Dividers and Tensions
3. Analyzing Connectors and Local Capacities for Peace
4. Analyzing the Assistance Program
5. Analyzing the Assistance Program’s Impact on Dividers and
Connectors
 Resource Transfers and Implicit Ethical Messages
6. Considering Program Options
7. Test Program Options and Redesign
• Exercise
• Resources
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History of DNH
•
Post Cold War Era
• Launched in early1990s –
organized by the Local Capacities for Peace Project (now, CDA)
– relationship of assistance in conflict settings
•
Based on gathering and comparing experiences from the
.
field
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History of DNH, continued
•
Assistance itself does not cause nor end conflict.
•
Fundamental question: “How can we provide assistance
without exacerbating tensions or conflict?”
•
Context, helps us get a handle on the complexity of the
conflict environments where we work.
.
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DNH Approach
•
Gathering the facts
•
Analyzing the facts
•
Programming Alternatives
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Framework: 7 Steps, a tool for mapping
Step 1: Understanding the Context of Conflict
Step 2: Analyzing Dividers and Tensions
Step 3: Analyzing Connectors and Local
Capacities for Peace (LCPs)
Step 4: Analyzing the Assistance Program
Step 5: Analyzing the Assistance Program’s
Impact on Dividers and Connectors
Step 6: Considering Program Options
Step 7: Test Program Options and Redesign
Identifying which conflicts are
dangerous in terms of violence.
What divides groups and causes
tensions? Ex. Historical Injustice (root
cause) , Manipulations by a
leader(proximate cause)
Divided by conflict, connected across
sub-group lines. Ex. Markets, Events
Shared attitudes.
Peacemakers. Ex. Elders, Teachers or
religious leaders.
Thorough Review of all aspects of
assistance. Ex Where, why, who, etc.
Who gains who loses? Do they overlap
with the dividers? Are we missing or
reinforcing connectors?
Instigates, eliminate negative aspects.
Overlooked peace makers, reprogram to
support peace opportunities.
Re-check impact
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Step 5: Analyzing the Assistance Program’s
Impact on Dividers and Connectors:
Resource Transfers
• Direct impact of assistance happens
when resources are introduced into
conflict settings
Example: Distributional Effects
When assistance is targeted to some
groups and not others, these groups (or
even partially) overlap with the
divisions represented in the conflict,
assistance can reinforce and exacerbate
conflict.
Assistance can also reinforce connectors
by crossing and linking groups by the way
it is distributed
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Step 5: Analyzing the Assistance
Program’s Impact on Dividers and
Connectors: Implicit Ethical Messages
Refers to our actions and attitudes
in the conflict setting.
Example: Different Values for
Different Lives
When agencies or their staff adopt
different policies for different
groups, suggesting some lives are
more valuable than others, they
present a message that instigates
division and conflict.
.
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Gender
•
Determine how gender roles and/or sex roles
have in these interactions.
 Sex Roles corresponds to biological roles
of men and women.
 Gender Roles correspond to a set
of social and behavioral norms that are
generally considered ‘appropriate’ for either
a man or a woman.
• Determine how gender roles affect Dividers
And Connectors.
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Gender
Example:
Connectors
•
Muslim and Christian women in Liberia, documentary
“Pray the Devil Back to Hell”.
Dividers
•
Neighborhood credit group representing only one
side of the conflict, using funds to rebuild those who
‘suffered the most’ representing only one side.
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Example: The River
•
What are the connectors and the dividers?
 Connectors: What is it that binds the two groups?
 Dividers: What is the source of tension?
What can you as an aid worker do to reinforce the
connectors and diminish the source/s of division?
•
What are our program options?
 Develop water points?
 Negotiate specific and agreed access to corridors?
•
What would be the best option from a DNH
perspective?
 Does the option exacerbate intergroup dividers?
 Does the options support connectors that bring
people together?
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Resources
• Anderson, Mary. B. (ed.), Options for Aid in Conflict: Lessons
From Field Experience, Cambridge: CDA Inc., 2000. It is a
lessons-learned manual, written by aid workers in conflict
areas. “Drawing on field experience, it is meant to help the
field staff of international aid agencies to understand their
working contexts better and to develop programming
approaches that support peace rather than war”.
http://www.swisspeace.ch/fileadmin/user_upload/Media/Topics
/Peacebuilding_Analysis___Impact/Resources/Anderson__M
ary_B._2000_Options_for_Aid_in_Confl.pdf
• CDA website has a specific area on Do No Harm, at
http://www.cdacollaborative.org
• Do No Harm Handbook
http://issat.dcaf.ch/content/download/950/7045/file/DoNoHarm
Handbook.pdf
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Questions
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Contact
Felicia Genet
[email protected]
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