Integrated Resilience Programming: Lessons from Uganda, Nepal, and Ethiopia
Event Information
Join REAL and team members from USAID-funded programs in Uganda, Nepal, and Ethiopia for an interactive discussion on successes and challenges of implementing integrated resilience programming in food security activities.
Defined as, “the intentional layering and sequencing of multi-sectoral interventions and the coordination of actors in order to prevent or reduce the drivers and effects of shocks and stresses that undermine the program and the long-term well-being of the target population,” integrated resilience programming has proven crucial to sustained resilience outcomes and the success of food security activities across the USAID portfolio.
By the end of this session, participants will have learned about the added value of integrated resilience programming in food security activities, hear examples of what integration looks like in practice, and learn about challenges faced when attempting to integrate programs at different stages of the program life cycle. Breakout group discussions will allow for more in-depth conversations with peers. This event is primarily for development practitioners who support USAID-funded activities, especially those working on food security and resilience.
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What Facilitates Integration in Resilience Programs? A Case Study on Nepal - new REAL learning brief
Panelists
Sagar Pokharel (Panelist) is the Technical Director for Apolou, the USAID Development Food Security Activity (DFSA) in Karamoja, Uganda. Through Apolou and previous work as the Resilience Director of Promoting Agriculture, Health, and Alternative Livelihoods (PAHAL) in Nepal, he has fully embraced integration as an approach for catalyzing resilience building within DFSAs.
Michael Mulford (Panelist) has more than 18 years of experience designing, managing and evaluating international relief and development programs, primarily in sub Saharan Africa. As Chief of Party, he currently leads the USAID Strengthening PSNP 4 Institutions and Resilience (SPIR) program in Ethiopia.
Jeeyon Kim (Lead Author) is the Senior Researcher for Resilience at Mercy Corps, where she leads research related to resilience in fragile contexts. Her recent research focuses on migration and linkages between resilience and women’s empowerment, social connectedness, and food security.
Emilie Rex (Moderator) is the lead technical consultant with Mercy Corps' Resilience Technical Support Unit. She collaborates with teams to unpack and develop co-creative solutions and learning guidance around technical challenges relating to resilience.
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This event is made possible by the generous support and contribution of the American people through the United States Agency for International Development (USAID). The contents of the materials produced through the REAL Award do not necessarily reflect the views of USAID or the United States Government.