RMRP 2020 - Resumen Regional - Noviembre 2019 [ES]
Resumen de la Respuesta Regional para Refugiados y Migrantes de Venezuela para 2020 en America Latina y el Caribe
Resumen de la Respuesta Regional para Refugiados y Migrantes de Venezuela para 2020 en America Latina y el Caribe
Protection Monitoring - Venezuelan situation
Monitoreo de Protección - Situación Venezuela
This is a rough methodology for prioritization of targeting based on expert knowledge and group consensus against defined criteria, using magnitude (size of the concerned population = No. and % of people affected) and intensity assessment (attribution of the severity of needs /vulnerability - through a standard 0-7 severity scale) of a given population group. [A visual representation of this scale is presented below.]
This guidance note provides information on why and how to use the Rapid Gender Analysis Assessment Tools. The primary audience of this guidance note is assessment team leaders and gender advisors. The Care Emergency Group Gender Team will take responsibility for preparation of rapid gender analyses for Type 4 and large Type 2 responses.
GTRM Informe de Situación Febrero 2019
Situation report of the activities implemented in March 2019 by the members of the R4V Venezuela Situation coordination platform - R4V - in the Southern Cone
R4V Maps and geodata - March 2019
R4V Maps and geodata - March 2019
UNHCR Dashboard - February 2019
UNHCR Dashboard - February 2019
R4V Situation report - January - February 2019
Stratigic Note CwC - Dec 2018
IOM Data and Statistics - July 2018
Needs assessment is essential for programme planning, monitoring and evaluation, and accountability, however needs assessment is still a critical weakness of humanitarian response. Organizations urgently need to improve how they do assessments. ACAPS and the Emergency Capacity Building Project (ECB) have produced this guide to fill the gap that existed for a practical resource that pulls together the main lessons learned from various humanitarian initiatives and experiences.
A review of secondary data is sometimes seen as a difficult and unwieldly exercise. However, it doesn’t have to be. This guidance notes gives some practical advice on how to undertake a systematic secondary data review in an emergency setting. The note is for all those considering a review, and no specific information management skills are required to understand or use it.
Excel Template for Secondary Data Review Mapping
The coronavirus disease (COVID-19) which originated in the Wuhan city of China in December 2019 was characterized as a pandemic by the World Health Organization (WHO) on 11 March 2020. 1 By the time of writing, more than 3 million confirmed cases and 200,000 deaths have been reported globally.2 Common symptoms of the disease include fever, dry cough, shortness of breath, fatigue, and other symptoms. While the majority of cases are mild, people with underlying health conditions (diabetes, heart and lung diseases, HIV, etc.) and from elderly age groups are thought to be at highest risk. Affecting almost every country in the world,3 many governments have enforced and physical distancing measures, ordered closure of borders, imposed nationwide shut-downs of non-essential services and restriction of movements. The most vulnerable populations are the hardest hit with limited access to health-care facilities and no social support system for covering loss of income due to disrupted livelihoods.