CEBU CITY – Localization od disaster aid in the Philippines is slow and there is too much reliance on international actors/assistance within its disaster risk reduction (DRR) and climate change adaptation (CCA) system, a study by the Harvard Humanitarian Initiative (HHI) said.
HHI researchers warned that a continued reliance on international aid agencies means the Philippines is not realizing its full potential for using local organizations to bolster its DRR and CCA system.
According to HHI Resilient Communities program director Vincenzo Bollettino that local community-based organizations (CBOs) and national non-governmental organizations (NGOs) as well as national and local government units are best positioned to respond to disasters.
The study published on October 29 involved face-to-face and online surveys from 2017 to 2019 and a network mapping among 501 international and local organizations with disaster and climate-related projects in the Philippines.
Participants were NGOs, CBOs or people’s organizations (POs), local government units (LGUs), government agencies, schools or research institutions, faith-based organizations, private organizations or companies, and affiliates of the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement.
(Network map of surveyed humanitarian actors working on disaster preparedness and resilience in the Philippines. | HHI/Root Change )
“Our research points to the continued central
networked role international aid agencies play in the Philippine disaster
system. Further progress is needed to ensure that local agencies are empowered
to respond without international support,” Bollettino said in a statement.
HHI, Harvard University’s humanitarian research center said that the findings of their study suggest that there is “preferential attachment” toward international actors within the Philippine DRR system. International actors were found to be the top “influencers” or those well-connected organizations that spread information quickly across the network.
They were also cited by most network actors as the top “brokers” or those that facilitate interaction between big and small actors in the system. International actors along with the government were found to be the top “collaboration hubs” or those connecting local organizations that otherwise would be disconnected within the larger system, the survey said.
Survey said that they were also the top “resource hubs” or those to whom other actors seek expertise from, according to the survey preferential attachment is a common phenomenon that can occur in humanitarian aid systems, where existing system actors are more likely to associate with organizations that have the most links and connections, and opportunities for funding.
“Unsurprisingly, when international agencies set up operations, they quickly become the target of preferential attachment by local actors,” HHI said.
The network actors’ preference to collaborate
with international actors rather than local actors can have initial positive
effects, as seen in the Philippines but such behavior can build a dependency on
international actors and can pose threats to the sustainability of the local
DRR system, HHI added.
The study also found out that the potential risks of preferential attachment toward international actors is present in the Philippines. Out of 387 actors that had relationships with other actors in the network, only 15 percent or 59 were international actors. But when removed, the total relationships between actors were reduced to 1,905 from 3,146, losing 39-percent of relationships.
The loss of these international actors also made 41 local actors “isolates” or having no connections to the rest of the network.
International actors were found to have more relationships with sub-national than national actors which is an indication that they have the potential to reach local levels. Most of the relationships though are between international and sub-national actors with 87-percent were from sub-national actors to international actors rather than the other way around, the study said.
This suggests that the flow of information, technical assistance, and resources was top-down. “This kind of network behavior demonstrates a weakness in the resilience of the local system and local actors’ ability to maintain coordination and collaboration when international actors withdraw their support,” Bollettino said.
HHI survey described sub-national actors as
local organizations who work only within a specific locality or region, while
national actors are local organizations who work throughout the country, but a shift
in the role of international actors within the system is expected over time.
According to HHI that it is common for international actors to eventually transfer their roles of fostering local system connectivity to a range of emerging local leaders at all levels. This process is called “localization,” and it puts local actors in the forefront and support them to lead humanitarian efforts.
“Eventually, we would want to see more local to local ties fostered between sub-national and national actors, government, and other local institutions,” Bollettino said.
HHI’s study was conducted in cooperation with international non-profit organization Root Change and HHI has been conducting research and training projects on disaster and climate resilience and humanitarian leadership in the Philippines since 2015. (Photos: Google/PH disasters)
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