Corruption and humanitarian relief

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U4 Helpdesk Query Query Corruption and humanitarian relief Please provide sources of information on key areas of corruption risk when providing disaster/emergency/humanitarian relief and some practical examples of what has been done to prevent/address it. Are there examples of measures, which tackle immediate relief and longerterm reconstruction? Who is working on these issues and are there examples of practical guidance?

U4 helpdesk reply This answer draws extensively on recent discussion papers produced within TI-S by the Policy and Research, Global Programmes, and the Asia Pacific teams. Also note that the U4 Resource Centre is currently developing a Focus Area on Corruption in Conflict and Emergency Situations. A series of resource pages should be available by mid-2006. Content

Part 1 - Corruption risks in humanitarian (disaster/emergency) relief Part 2 - Anti-Corruption and Transparency Recommendations Part 3 - Useful links

Part 1 - Corruption risks in humanitarian (disaster/emergency) relief Most type of aid and development assistance is vulnerable to corruption and misuse of funds and there now exists a significant body of research and analysis to this extent. Disaster relief and humanitarian assistance is no different. In fact, in addition to some of the more commonly addressed aid related corruption issues, specific risks and opportunities for corruption may arise anew or become more acute in relief situations. Such risks are present throughout the aid cycle - from immediate relief efforts to longer term reconstruction. Risks in the relief aid stage (immediate term) •

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Procurement of goods and services for relief operations is performed through emergency contracting processes that enable for faster contracting mechanisms (direct contracting). There is often no record keeping of these contracts that allow for ex-post transparency, accountability or monitoring. Distribution of goods and services is prone to fall prey to corruption networks and bureaucratic obstacles limiting access to those in need, volume actually distributed and the quality delivered. It is difficult to track the inflow of funds and therefore to asses whether they reached their desired destination. Moreover, while public and international funds are more easily identifiable, private funds are difficult to track and therefore to monitor their expenditure. However, the overriding need to safe lives does make the timeliness and efficacy of the response a priority. Measures that introduce bureaucratic requirements and unnecessary delays should be avoided. Corruption prevention efforts should be focused on the reconstruction stage.

Risks in the reconstruction stage (mid to long term)


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Corruption and humanitarian relief by CMI Chr. Michelsen Institute - Issuu