2.
Humanitarian activities and within
this point it is relevant to highlight two
activities:
a.
Bring relief by all available means to all
disaster-affected persons.
b.
Organize, coordinate and direct inter-
national relief actions in accordance
with the “Principles and Rules for
Red Cross and Red Crescent Disaster
Relief” adopted by the International
Conference.
This function is reflected as a priority action in
IFRC’s
Strategy 2030
,
Agenda for Renewal
, and Plan
and Budget 2021–2025.
Disaster laws and policy
The IFRC supports National Societies in achieving
a strategic and effective approach to humani-
tarian diplomacy, including policy and practice
change and representation. National Societies
are also given support and advice in disaster law,
to enable them to support their governments in
developing and implementing effective laws and
policies for disaster risk management as well as
the auxiliary role.
Priorities, strategies and joint approaches to
influencing are all focus areas, as is the coordina-
tion of thematic and event-based networks with
interested National Societies in areas of priority.
Advocacy reports, key messages and research
products such as the
World Disasters Report
are
produced, and IFRC network coordination is
ensured around major policy events. In addition,
IFRC experts in this area lead inter-agency and
inter-governmental cooperation (such as the
Grand Bargain’s Localization Workstream and
the Climate-Science Humanitarian Dialogue), and
support capacity strengthening on humanitarian
diplomacy, disaster law and the auxiliary role.
In 2022, support was provided for IFRC network
advocacy on the climate crisis (including through
publishing new evidence on gaps in climate
financing and fielding a powerful delegation
to the UNFCCC COP, where the IFRC’s Climate
Resilience Platform was launched among doz-
ens of events with Red Cross and Red Crescent
speakers), pandemic prevention and prepared-
ness (as a consistent voice in the negotiations
of the new pandemic treaty and revision of the
International Health Regulations), in solutions
for forced displacement (as a leading voice for
localization at the Global Refugee Forum), and in
localization of aid (with support for the outcome
of the Grand Bargain Intermediaries Caucus and
the first localization dialogue in the Democratic
Republic of the Congo).
In the area of disaster law, several global research
and advisory products were launched, including
the world’s first comprehensive database of
national disaster laws, and supported more than
30 evidenced-based reports at country level and
over a dozen National Societies in formal techni-
cal support to their authorities on new laws.
In June 2022, during the Statutory Meetings
of the Red Cross and Red Crescent, revised
policies on Volunteering and National Society
Development were adopted and are now guiding
the work of the IFRC and the wider network.
Protection, gender and inclusion
Protection, gender and inclusion is the IFRC’s
approach to preventing issues of violence, dis-
crimination and exclusion in communities, in
crisis situations and emergencies, and in Red
Cross and Red Crescent institutional capacities.
The three main objectives are institutional capac-
ity, composition, and commitment to address
violence, discrimination, and exclusion; National
Societies and the IFRC adopt a comprehensive
Protection, Gender, and Inclusion approach
across all operations, programmes, and services;
and develop and improve advocacy, partner-
ships, and learning within the Movement and
externally to support better protection, gender,
and inclusion actions.
The work encompasses the centrality of protec-
tion (including child protection), social inclusion,
the prevention of trafficking in persons and SGBV,
disability inclusion, anti-racism, diversity inclu-
sion, gender equality, protecting and restoring
family links, LGBTQAI2+ inclusion, violence pre-
vention, diversity management, survivor-centred
approaches, and safeguarding.
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