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This manual will help field staff to mainstream HIV andAIDS in
humanitarian emergencies. It assumes someknowledge of humanitarian
programming and is intended to build staff skills in addressing the
underlying causes of vulnerability to HIV infection and the
consequences of HIV and AIDS, particularly in rapid-onset
emergencies. The authors draw on experience in the field and offer
practical recommendations on how to make sure that HIV and AIDS is
considered when responding to humanitarian crises. The book
explains both how HIV affects emergencies and how emergencies
affect HIV, as well as identifying the particular needs of
potential vulnerable groups. There is guidance particularly for
managers in the planning stage but the book also suggests how to
mainstream HIV and AIDS throughout the emergency project cycle. It
includes useful checklists and planning tools with examples of
inductions, trainings and awareness-raising sessions both for staff
and for community members. The CD ROM to accompany the manual
features the full text of the book plus training materials for use
in the field.
This guide provides a reliable and practical method for identifying
the contribution an agency makes to changes to people s lives in
the recovery period following disasters. It outlines 11 steps that
take evaluators through designing quantitative and qualitative
methods through to collecting field data and developing a narrative
of evidence and change. The Contribution to Change tool encourages
recognition of the efforts of the community itself, as well as the
impact of other actors such as government or community-based
groups.As the number of people affected by disasters has risen, so
have the expectations placed on humanitarian agencies by donors,
the public and the affected populations themselves. Agencies must
now provide evidence of impact of their interventions. But applying
conventional evaluation methods can pose problems. How can we
assess the difference that intervention makes? Is it ethical to
consign some disaster-affected communities to control groups? How
feasible is it to collect baseline data among people who have just
been traumatized?"
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