Podcast: A conversation on the ‘Accelerating Localisation Through Partnerships’ programme
- Issue 79 Localisation and local humanitarian action
- 1 Capacity-strengthening and localisation: perspectives from CAFOD and its local partners
- 2 Strengthening local actors in north-east Nigeria: a nexus approach
- 3 Partners not participants: reflections on capacity-strengthening projects in Afghanistan
- 4 Empowering local NGOs: the story of Syria Relief
- 5 From a group of volunteers to a local NGO: CEDIER’s journey in support of the protection of children in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo
- 6 Histories and hierarchies of localisation in Rakhine State, Myanmar
- 7 Responding together to Covid-19 in Mumbai: joint action by communities, civil society and government
- 8 Learning from survivor- and community-led response in Haiti
- 9 Strength, voice and space: making locally led response a reality
- 10 Boost local Quick Response Funds to strengthen local humanitarian leadership
- 11 L’union fait la force: lessons on localisation from Haiti
- 12 Local funding flows and leadership: recent trends in 10 major humanitarian responses
- 13 Innovating to increase flexible funding for local-level organisations
- 14 Local leadership, Covid-19 and the Pacific
- 15 ‘How can we contribute if we can’t participate?’ The accessibility of humanitarian guidance to local and national organisations
- 16 Localising knowledge generation during a pandemic to make distributions safer
- 17 The state of play: localisation and state leadership of humanitarian action
- 18 Podcast: A conversation on the ‘Accelerating Localisation Through Partnerships’ programme
As part of this special Humanitarian Exchange edition on localisation and local humanitarian action HPN commissioned a podcast on the ‘Accelerating Localisation Through Partnerships‘ (ALTP) programme. The project involved a consortium of international NGOS: Christian Aid, CARE, Tearfund, ActionAid, CAFOD, Oxfam as well as more than 200 local and national NGOs and NGO networks across Myanmar, Nepal, Nigeria and South Sudan. The aim of the programme, which began in 2017, was to foster and leverage the power of strong partnerships between national and local NGOs and INGOs, to strengthen local leadership of humanitarian response and advance the localisation agenda in the four countries mentioned above.
The recording below is a conversation between our host, Jane Backhurst from Christian Aid UK and panelists Obele Oluchukwu from Christian Aid Nigeria; Nini Myint from Christian Aid Myanmar; Malish John from CARE South Sudan and Hast Bahadur Sunar from Tear Fund in Nepal, who have all lead the ALTP project in their respective countries.
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