footprint of the network (as demonstrated in the
IFRC’s
Everyone Counts
reports).
Federation-wide standard plans
and reports
To better reflect the breadth of work across the
network, the IFRC is working to achieve both
more coordination and standardization. This
will enable resource mobilization, and result in
less earmarking and decreased pledge-based
reporting through solid country-based unified
plans and reports.
To achieve this, the IFRC is focused on inclusive
engagement with member National Societies to
drive a results-based management approach.
In 2022, the IFRC embarked on unified planning
at country level, centered on National Societies’
priorities and needs, bringing together ongoing
emergency operations and longer-term work,
and based on a Federation-wide planning
approach. This has allowed the organization
to produce 85 Federation-wide external plans
covering 130 countries for 2023.
Efforts also focused on creating a collective own-
ership by the membership through the planning
review week (senior leaders from 23 National
Societies presented their plans to more than 400
participants from across the IFRC network) and
a writeshop for the preparation of zero drafts of
the external plans.
Security Management
Security management ensures that the IFRC has
the security architecture in place to ensure the
safety of its staff, volunteers and operations
through training and the establishment of secu-
rity procedures.
A strong security mindset not only protects
the volunteers and staff who deliver the IFRC
network’s programmes and activities at ground
level, but also the communities they work within.
The extensive planning and regulations created
by the Security Unit give all IFRC personnel
a consistent security environment wherever
they may be deployed, and every staff mem-
ber undertakes personal security training that
equips them with vital skills and advice in their
daily lives.
The IFRC continually works to strengthen its secu-
rity risk management structure and approach
to ensure that the organization remains ‘fit for
purpose’ and meets both legal and moral ‘duty
of care’ obligations to all personnel under its
security management responsibility.
The organization works to increase the aware-
ness, skills and capabilities of IFRC and National
Society managers, deployed personnel, staff and
volunteers while concurrently building security
management capacities. Its goal is to allow the
IFRC and National Societies to better fulfil their
humanitarian mandate by enabling them to
operate in a safe and secure manner, within
any given security context, mitigating any risks
associated with programmes and operations.
To achieve these goals, a culture of security is
encouraged both within the IFRC and among
member National Societies, who are supported
to adopt security standards or to develop their
own security frameworks. This contributes to the
quality of support provided to at-risk commu-
nities by enabling Red Cross and Red Crescent
personnel to engage with communities in either
capacity building, resilience strengthening or
emergency response, effectively and efficiently
in the most secure manner possible. By doing so
it supports the strategic imperatives identified in
Strategy 2030
and the
Agenda for Renewal
.
In 2022, National Societies and the IFRC benefit-
ted from both an updated and expanded suite of
security training materials – Stay Safe 2.0 – and
a rewritten and overhauled Minimum Security
Requirements policy. Both initiatives were
produced to the highest standards, using state
of the art analysis and the latest pedagogical
approaches.
The Office of Internal Audit and
Investigations
Internal audit and investigations is the corner-
stone of the IFRC’s assurance arrangements,
allowing the organization to meet its obligations
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