Afghanistan Plan 2021
IFRC Country Plan for Afghanistan in 2021.
IFRC Country Plan for Afghanistan in 2021.
IFRC Regional Plan for the Americas in 2021.
IFRC Country Plan for Haiti in 2021.
IFRC Country plan for Antigua and Barbuda in 2021.
IFRC Country Plan for Zambia in 2021.
IFRC Country Plan for Uganda in 2021.
IFRC Southern AfricaCountry Cluster Plan for 2021.
IFRC Country Plan for Malawi in2021.
This Tip Sheet provides a summary of top tips from the IFRC'sStep-by-Step Guide for Rental Assistance to People Affected by Crisis. It is designed to introduce the reader to some of the key concepts related to Rental Assistance Programming. For those requiring further information please refer to the guide.
People forced to leave their homes by a crisis would often prefer to rent a room, an apartment, or a house rather than live in a makeshift shelter or camp. This is particularly the case in urban areas. Rented accommodation can be used to rest, and provides safety and protection whilst households recover and decide what to do next: move on, return, settle, or reconstruct. The objective of this step-by-step guide is to provide a framework for how to plan, design and implement a successful rental assistance programme. Examples and tools have also been included to practically illustrate and support successful programme delivery. You can find a summary of this guide in the Tip Sheet for Rental Assistance Programming.
These guidelines provide advice on how best to support disaster-affected communities to meet their immediate shelter needs through dignified, appropriate and durable shelter solutions. The guidelines are designed to help those preparing for, planning, managing and implementing shelter relief operations to decide whether or how the IFRC shelter kit can assist in meeting post-disaster shelter needs.
This advisory note offersguidance to National Societies on the process of revising their Statutes. Section one explains the need for regular revision. Section 2 highlights the elements conducive to a successful revision process. And Section 3 provides an overview of support available to National Societies for this process.
Policy on internal displacement adopted by the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement during the Council of Delegates in Nairobi, November 2009.
This Code of Conduct seeks to guard our standards of behaviour. It is not about operational details, such as how one should calculate food rations or set up a refugee camp. Rather, it seeks to maintain the high standards of independence, effectiveness and impact to which disaster response NGOs and the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement aspires.
Young people are key drivers in humanitarian action and development. Being meaningfully engaged as today’s and tomorrow’s leaders, volunteers, and members of affected communities, they foster community resilience. The purpose of this Policy is to set the standard in working with and for young people throughout the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent National Societies (IFRC). It serves as a global point of reference to ensure consistency in decision-making and builds on and replaces the IFRC Youth Policy and Strategy (1991) and the IFRC Youth Policy (2011).