
A Review of The Anti-Racism and Decolonisation (ARD) Framework in Start Network
This review evaluates the ARD Framework's integration into Start Network’s internal organisational processes and its overall impact since its inception.
This review evaluates the ARD Framework's integration into Start Network’s internal organisational processes and its overall impact since its inception.
This report presents an overview of the current utilisation of Local, Indigenous, and Traditional Knowledge (LITK) within Start Network whilst exploring potential avenues for its enhanced capture and utilisation.
A reflection from Gareth Owen, Humanitarian Director at Save the Children UK, on the state of humanitarian action moving forward.
This framework has been developed to help Start Network, our members and teams understand and address the many ways in which racism and colonialism can affect our work.
The Community Led Approaches to MEAL Grant enables people affected by or at-risk of crises to have more of a say in monitoring, evaluation, accountability and learning.
This localisation framework is set out as a series of intensions and questions across 11 elements where we feel change is needed. The intention outlines the vision of where we want to be or get to as a humanitarian network. The issues outline questions that Start Network needs to answer at all levels leadership, management, staff, membership, Hubs, etc.
In 2015, the Start Network members began three collaborative responses to large-scale crises: the Central African Republic (CAR) Refugees in Cameroon Response (Cameroon); the Ebola Preparedness Programme (Guinea Bissau, Mali, Senegal and Ivory Coast); and the European Refugee Crisis (Greece, Croatia, Macedonia, Slovenia and Serbia).