work) and identify trends that contribute to
organizational decision-making processes.
For the knowledge portfolio, the foundations
and strategic framework were designed in 2022.
Learning stemming from the operations of the
three National Society development funding
mechanisms was consolidated, analysed which
will become instrumental
in the National Society
peer-to-peer learning processes.
The IFRC Innovation team’s Limitless programme
engaged 1,000 young people across 72 coun-
tries who received training, funding, coaching
and mentoring to design and implement inno-
vative approaches to addressing the impacts
of COVID-19 in their communities. More than
300,000 community members were reached
through
these initiatives, and videos of their pro-
jects have been viewed more than 250,000 times.
Disasters, Climate and Crises
Operations coordination
Operations coordination supports the IFRC net-
work with the development and maintenance
of the local to global IFRC disaster management
system, to ensure speedy, high quality, coherent
and well-coordinated operations. Through this
work, the IFRC ensures operational and pro-
grammatical quality and accountability through
leadership and
knowledge sharing across
relevant technical areas (in support of National
Societies, regional office and delegation roles for
management of operations and programmes);
global representation and policy positioning.
The IFRC takes a continuum approach to
operations and programmes that facilitates
coordination and support, and strengthens
community preparedness, response, recovery,
and resilience across all
strategic priorities in
the plan and budget 2021–2025. This includes
provision of quality assurance of operations, sup-
porting National Society capacity development,
and global level networking in close coordination
with other functions across the IFRC and with
external partners.
Throughout 2022, direct coordination and
support were provided to IFRC Regional Offices
to strengthen operations coordination and
management, as
well as the development of
clear guidelines for launching new operations.
This included overall operational coordination,
support and improvement to the timeliness and
quality of Emergency Appeals and DREFs, with
a focus on a clear strategy to operationalize the
proposed response and ensure that National
Societies will have a positive impact on the peo-
ple in need of support.
A focus on operational Movement coordination
allowed for smooth strategic
relations and oper-
ational coordination between the IFRC, National
Societies and the International Committee of the
Red Cross in the spirit of Movement principles
and joint initiatives agreed between the different
Movement components, such as Strengthening
Movement Cooperation and Coordination. The
team also supervises the coordination of Red
Cross and Red Crescent Reference Centres
worldwide.
The IFRC also hosts several projects under its
legal status in Geneva, including the Global
Road Safety Partnership, the Risk-Informed
Early Action Partnership (REAP) and the Steering
Committee for Humanitarian Response.
National Societies were provided with strategic
direction and guidance to support their prepar-
edness, response policies, strategies, and plans;
to engage in risk analysis and planning, assess-
ments, and to strengthen
their operational
capacity to manage disasters and crises, while
ensuring coordination at all levels and effective
operational support functions.
The IFRC worked throughout 2022 to keep track
of the overall ambition of National
Society pre-
paredness and response capacity, that enables
National Societies to fulfil their auxiliary role, by
strengthening local preparedness and response
capacities, to
ensure timely and effective
humanitarian assistance to prevent and alleviate
human suffering. Guidance was also provided to
facilitate the operationalization of preparedness
and response capacity, specifically through
the Preparedness for Effective Response
(PER) approach.
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