community trust and develop evidence-based
recommendations, actions, and plans to
increase trust.
The IFRC continues
to co-chair the Collective
Ser vice for
Risk Communication and
Community Engagement
(RCCE) which
engages more than 60 partners and supports
almost 30 countries globally deliver the greatest
impact, reduce duplication, and increase effec-
tiveness of localized action.
The RCCE
data dashboard
streamlined the
analysis and use of socio-behavioural data, com-
munity
feedback, social listening insights. With
more than 250 studies and 170,000 data points,
it continues to be a reference to understand the
COVID data landscape.
As of December 2022,
the IFRC had supported
dedicated initiatives to strengthen community
engagement and accountability approaches in
77 National Societies throughout all regions. A
total of 29 surge deployments also supported
community engagement strategies in crisis
responses, from the Ukraine response to the
hunger crisis in Africa.
The IFRC also accelerated
support to National
Societies to systematically collect, analyze, and
use community data and evidence to inform
decision-making, and demonstrate the impact
of community engagement.
The newly released
Community Feedback kit
sup-
ported the IFRC and National Societies in setting
up systematic feedback systems (
85 feedback
mechanisms
were active as of December 2022).
Feedback systems were activated in operations
such as the Ebola response in Uganda and to
address community concerns and perceptions
within the Ukraine response.
In an effort to enhance data capacity, more
than 80 Red Cross and Red Crescent staff from
32 National Societies
worldwide were trained
to accelerate investments into better quality,
availability and use of data on behavioural and
social
dimensions, communities’ perspectives
and knowledge to inform effective programming.
The newly designed
Social Science training
and
data toolbox will support this effort.
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