An open letter to Mihir Bhatt from Sean Lowrie

half of all human suffering in disasters is in small scale, low profile crises, which are not addressed by the aid system.

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Time to read: 3 minutes

Following the World Humanitarian Summit consultation in Geneva, Sean Lowrie, Director of the Start Network, penned an open letter to Mihir Bhatt, Director of the All India Disaster Mitigation Institute (AIDMI).

Dear Mihir,

May I begin by stating how honoured I feel to have a long-term conversation with you. As part of this conversation, I’d like to share my thoughts about where we are and ask to hear your thoughts about our path, our goals, and our ambitions.

There have been brilliant inputs to the latest World Humanitarian Summit (WHS) consultation in Geneva. Including the various agency submissions, technical working groups, ALNAP’s (Active Learning Network for Accountability and Performance) State of the System report and conference in New York, and the awesome synthesis report

That said, it could be argued that the inputs only highlight what already lies within eyesight. ALNAP says the aid system does a very good job, but others will argue that half of all human suffering in disasters is in small scale, low profile crises, which are not addressed by the aid system.

I think we need a new economy for the humanitarian aid system. We need a decentralised system with considerably more capacity at the national level. We need smart humanitarianism. In other words, the system must be customer-driven and contextually appropriate. It must be as local as possible and international as necessary. Organisations and people should be able to swarm around problems when responding to a humanitarian crisis, without any central attempt at control. They need to be empowered with all the information available about a crisis, and equipped with decision-making protocols.

We will not be able to wish this into existence. We will need to create new business models, with incentives that create opportunities for humanitarian self-organisation around contextually-specific problems. A diverse, resilient, abundant, and agile ecosystem of organisations and ways of working is needed. We must accept that we cannot control the aid system.

To rise to the escalating demand for humanitarian action, part-time humanitarians will be needed from all of society including religious leadership, diaspora groups, social enterprises, unaffiliated volunteers, and companies from many markets in the private sector. Platforms to enable this new humanitarian economy – like a marketplace – will be needed to enable trade and collaboration between the agents of this new economy. A new economy for humanitarian aid will enable the whole of society to contribute to humanitarian action, and to collaborate to ensure we are effective stewards of this planet for future generations.

I look forward to hearing your thoughts about where we are.

With best wishes,

Sean Lowrie