relevant, and has provided financial support
to its Global IFRC Reference Centres. (See the
Network-wide Perspective
section for a com-
plete overview of Red Cross and Red Crescent
reference centres, hubs and initiatives).
Integration agreements
In addition, the IFRC also continued to support
its coordination efforts by encouraging National
Societies operating internationally to work under
integration agreement with the IFRC. In 2022,
four additional partner National Societies signed
a Global Framework Agreement for Integration
Services, enhancing thus the capacity of the IFRC
to appear as one coherent network throughout
its operations. The IFRC also provided advice
and
training on integration, ensured that
integrated National
Societies had signed the
latest and necessary agreements to do so, and
continued its efforts to map agreements and
integrated staff worldwide. The IFRC ensured
that risks were appropriately managed and that
services provided consistently match the high
standard expected.
Movement
cooperation
In Movement cooperation, the
Strengthening
Movement Cooperation and Coordination
initiative (SMCC 2.0)
worked on the priority
workstreams set out in the Council of Delegates
resolution in 2019, through the different
Movement Implementation Teams (MITs) with the
involvement of IFRC, ICRC and National Societies.
A progress report was presented at the 2022
Council of Delegates in June. At the same meet-
ing, the Movement Coordination for Collective
Impact Agreement – known as Seville 2.0 – was
also approved. This necessitated the revision of
SMCC tools and the SMCC structure.
The collective
Red Cross and Red Crescent
response and impact in operations have been
boosted by SMCC, with SMCC tools being used
at various levels in several emergencies in 2022,
including those in
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