peacebuilding fund update presentation to the pbc december 2013
TRANSCRIPT
2013: An increased focus on assisting country programme design
• For 2013, the PBF instituted a more proactive approach to assist country programme design
• Taking into account country-level demand and a country ‘scanning’, identifying priority countries for every 6 – 9 month period
• Early financial support for preparatory activities (pre-secretariat structures, conflict analysis, PBF sensitization & planning workshops)
• Technical assistance by the PBF staff and mobilizing partnerships (InterPeace, PeaceNexus, former PBF Advisory Group members)
• In 2013 priority countries were: Guinea, Kyrgyzstan, Liberia, Niger, Somalia, South Sudan, Yemen
• September 2013 to early 2014 priority countries: Burundi, Cote d’Ivoire, Guinea Bissau, Mali, Papua New Guinea, Sierra Leone, Somalia, Yemen
• Earlier partnership with other parts of the UN system – including PBC – also key
The PBF programme team benefits from assistance from UNHCR
Strengthened M&E unit is focusing on quality
All PBF countries now have a programme officer and an M&E support officer
Increased field missions offering direct support for development of Theories of Change and Results Frameworks (Kyrgyzstan, Yemen,
Guatemala)
Organization of first regional workshop and of another revision of Guidelines
Quality assurance on periodic reporting on results (i.e. new Joint Steering Committee Annual Reports, feedback on project-level 6
monthly reports)
Management and co-management of PRF and IRF evaluations, respectively
Collaboration with Policy Branch on three PBF-related thematic reviews: women in peacebuilding (2013); reconciliation (planned);
employment (planned)
3
The M&E unit benefits from assistance from Australia and UNDP
Current PBF Country Portfolio
Active: Peacebuilding & Recovery Facility (PRF)** 1. Burundi* 2. CAR* 3. Comoros4. Côte d'Ivoire 5. DRC 6. Guatemala7. Guinea* 8. Guinea Bissau* 9. Kyrgyzstan**10. Liberia* 11. Nepal 12. Papua New
Guinea13. Sierra Leone* 14. South Sudan 15. Yemen Active: Immediate Reponse Facility (IRF) - only 16. Chad** 17. Lebanon** 18. Myanmar **19. Niger** 20. Somalia 21. Bosnia
Herzegovina
Closing: Countries closing 2014Uganda (Northern - GPI) Sudan Libya
UN country teams preparing proposals for PBF:Colombia, Mali, Philippines
* = Peacebuilding Commission ** = Declared Eligible by the Secretary-General
Note: Priority Plan allocations take time to be disbursed against approved projects.
Date Country Eligibility/PPP/IRFAmount Allocated (US$m)
Feb-13 South Sudan Priority Plan 10.0Feb-13 Myanmar Support to Myanmar Peace Center 0.5Apr-13 Niger Reconciliation Project 3.0Apr-13 PNG Eligibility May-13 Kyrgyzstan Surge Support – Pre Secretariat Capacity 0.1May-13 Comoros Priority Plan (2nd version) 2.5May-13 Yemen Support to Implementation of Yemen's Political Transition 0.5May-13 UN Secretariat PBF Review Project 0.3Jun-13 Priority Plan (2nd Amendment) 5.0Jun-13 Dialogue/Mediation for SRSG Djinnit 1.3Sep-13 Priority Plan (3rd Amendment Elections Support) 3.3Jun-13 Myanmar Eligibility Jun-13 Guinea Bissau High Level Strategic Commission 0.5Aug-13 Myanmar Peace Dividends in the South-East 1.6Sep-13 Kyrgyzstan Priority Plan 15.0Sep-13 Yemen Women and Youth 1.0Sep-13 Yemen Addressing Grievances in the South 1.1Oct-13 Liberia Priority Plan 15.0Oct-13 Sierra Leone Transition Support Constitutional Review 0.3Oct-13 Bosnia Herzegovina Promoting Co-Existence and Diversity in Bosnia Herzegovina 2.0Oct-13 PNG Surge Support – Pre Secretariat Capacity 0.2Nov-13 Niger EligibilityDec-13 Guinea Priority Plan Second Phase 15.3Dec-13 Guinea Bissau Labour Intensive Employment for Youth and Women 1.9Dec-13 Sierra Leonne Transition Support SSR 2.8Dec-13 CAR Human Rights Capacity 1.0
Total 84.2
Guinea
List of Peacebuilding Allocation Decisions in 2013
2013 Country Highlights (1) • Guinea – • Two strategies in 2013:
• First: Address political crisis around legislative elections • Total amount $5.5 million using both IRF and PRF • Electoral support through dialogue, election monitoring, support to the mediator
(SRSG Djinnit) , political dialogue, youth employment)
• Second: Organize phase 2 of Priority Plan 2013 – 2015 • Total amount requested $15.3 million • Areas of work include: political dialogue (central, community), national reconciliation,
women & youth employment, parliamentary support.• Liberia – • Core strategy for 2013: developing phase 2 of Priority Plan 2013 – 2015
• $15 million approved in September, 2013 • Centered on supporting the National Roadmap for Reconciliation: land commission,
national human rights commission, “palaya” huts, national youth programme extension, national resource management in collaboration with the World Bank, women’s economic empowerment
• Positioning of Joint Steering Committee and Priority Plan more closely aligned with the Government’s Agenda for Transformation (overall national plan)
2013 Country Highlights (2)
• Kyrgyzstan – $15m Priority Plan approved in September focusing on:• a) the rule of law and human rights promotion; b) improving local
governance capacity to manage conflict and reduce tensions in collaboration with civil society and community efforts; c) promotion of policies to deal with ethnic relations, national unity and language policy.
• JSC established in early 2013 co-chaired by the Presidents Office and UNRC and comprising of members of the UN team, government, donors, Civil society. JSC supported the process of preparing conflict analysis, priority plan.
• Individual projects expected to be approved by the JSC before the end of the year.
• Mali – Strategic focus: “quick support response”• Cantonment project in Kidal expected before the end of the year (IRF $3m)• Working closely with MINUSMA – through them government has officially
expressed interest in being eligible for PBF • PBSO has been organizing meetings across UN system to have coordinated
approach with MINUSMA on peacebuilding
• Yemen – Strategic focus: supporting national dialogue and scaling-up UN Country Team support outside of Sa’ana • Approval of 2 IRF’s in support of national dialogue (participation of women
and youth, and focus on the south).• Eligibility declared in February 2013; Joint Steering Committee established,
chaired by the Prime Minister • Priority Plan under development in areas of political dialogue, transitional
justice, local governance and local peace dividends • Niger – Strategic focus: supporting Government’s peace consolidation plan
• Eligibility requested formally in November, 2013 • $3m IRF programme for youth engagement in border areas started• Possible follow-up issues: strengthening security sector, youth employment,
women’s empowerment, extractive industries • South Sudan – Strategic focus: UNMISS Peacebuilding Support Plan
• $10m PRF approved February 2013• Decentralized youth engagement & peace dividends (water access)
2013 Country Highlights (3)
• Burundi – Strategic focus: 3rd Priority Plan for period before next election• Burundi has developed a new Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper (PRSP),
which integrates peacebuilding issues, particularly in governance pillar. • Following on the October 2012 Conference organized in Switzerland in
collaboration with the PBC, the Fund aims to build momentum for issues aligned to the PRSP.
• A Priority Plan has been drafted; conflict analysis is being discussed by the Burundi government and the UN, prior to PBSO submission. The approach was agreed also by the PBC. Expected areas of support are: social cohesion/national dialogue, youth participation, human rights, and resolution of land disputes.
• Meanwhile, 2013 results of the closing year of the 2nd Priority Plan (2011-2013) include: strengthening of government's capacity to coordinate and plan activities in the area of reintegration; reduction of tensions and increase of social cohesion; peaceful resolution of 305 land conflicts; access to revenue for 540 vulnerable persons through community work; finalization of construction of 202 houses for reintegration; equipment of 3 youth centers; training of returnees and ex-combatants in entrepreneurship.
2013 Country Highlights (4)
2013 Country highlights (5)• Myanmar – strategic focus: helping UN respond to rapidly evolving
peace processes• Myanmar declared eligible in mid-2013 • In 2013, peace dividends in south-east ($1.6m) and support for
Myanmar Peace Centre ($0.5m); another peace dividends project in southern Shan State under development
• Joint mission with the World Bank on a small grants facility to accompany the Joint Peacebuilding Needs Assessment
• Sierra Leone – strategic focus: maintaining UN peacebuilding focus as UNIPSIL transitions to a UN Country Team with PBC accompaniment • Package of IRF proposals being supported: conflict prevention; security
sector reform; constitutional review; human rights
2013 Country Highlights (6)
• CAR – strategic focus: use IRF to support BINUCA efforts so facilitate exit from crisis • PBF suspended all programmes in April 2013. • In September 2013 – in collaboration with PBC and, on the ground, with EU –
agreed to support civilian police / gendarmerie re-start• In November 2013 – agreed to explore support human rights work through
OHCHR
• Guinea Bissau – strategic focus: use IRF to support UNIOGBIS efforts to advance the transition• Agreed to $5m package of IRFs to assist transition, including:
• support high level planning commission, joint with DPA; political dialogue, fight against drug trafficking, women’s programme, symbolic (catalytic) elections support
• The full (suspended) PRF portfolio postponed after elections take place• ASG Cheng-Hopkins and PBC Config Chair to visit in early 2014
2013 Country Highlights (7)
• Papua New Guinea – Strategic focus: peacebuilding activities in the Autonomous Region of Bougainville as it prepares for its referendum on possible independence (due between 2015 and 2020).• Eligibility declared in mid-2013 • Possible areas of support include : youth issues, referendum process, women’s
participation, arms disposal, peace process management capacity, relationship between national and autonomous authorities, and rule of law/transitional justice.
• Joint Steering Committee will include Bougainville and national government• Conflict analysis being undertaken in collaboration with InterPeace • Joint DPA / PBSO mission in November, 2013
• Bosnia and Herzegovina – Strategic focus: building on Presidential initiative to counter concerning trends on ethnic relations • Support for Presidentially endorsed dialogue platform• Support for media / cultural initiatives and outreach into youth and education environments
to create space for discussion of ethnic relations • Joint DPA / PBSO mission in December, 2013
Collaborating with IFI’s Specific efforts to collaborate with the World Bank/ AfDB Liberia – The PBF is working with the World Bank to undertake a study on natural resource
management; follow-up funding foreseen in Priority Plan
Myanmar - Joint World Bank/PBF mission to design a small grants facility to accompany the Joint Peacebuilding Needs Assessment
Somalia – PBSO mission (Nov 2013) to Somalia meeting with AfDB and the World Bank to review how conflict-related financing instruments can best be aligned in support of the Somalia New Deal Compact
Central African Republic – Discussion of how conflict analysis / needs assessment can be jointly undertaken.
Visit by the Chair of the PBF Advisory Group to the World Bank – Visit to Vice-President of Africa’s office highlighted the need for early collaboration – recommended in particular joint work on CAR
15
Looking Forward
• Colombia – IRF proposal for peace campaign under preparation
• Cote d’Ivoire – Expression of interest for a second phase of PBF support. Positive response relying on findings of the evaluation (first phase)
• Somalia – Eligibility request by the President received in early December to to provide support in newly recovered areas, including governance, youth engagement, national dialogue, peace dividends
• Democratic Republic of Congo – 2009 grant was evaluated in 2013; possible 2nd grant in 2014, focused on 2nd generation ISSSS and ‘Islands of Stability’ approach
In addition to actions that follow directly on the country highlights listed in the previous slides, some additional activities foreseen in 2014 include:
TRANSFERS TO RECIPIENT UN ORGANISATIONS ( as of 15 December 2013) 2007 - 2011 year by year and cumulative (US$ million)
2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013Total 2007
- 2013
UNDP
38,030,816
29,626,262
22,536,652 40,245,780 35,996,320 18,565,492 18,328,669 203,329,992
UNICEF
189,390
4,100,000 10,417,611 6,082,068 5,132,745 5,674,078
31,595,892
UNOPS
788,644
1,905,000
2,930,696 12,391,350 3,899,354 8,601,784
30,516,828
UNHCR
700,000
2,100,010
1,480,696 4,574,742 8,678,295 719,425 450,000
18,703,168
UNFPA
4,000,000
200,005
3,368,959 4,699,300 1,635,360 946,036 936,138
15,785,798
IOM
4,610,933
1,605,602 3,460,103 1,426,225 3,192,785 1,515,167
15,810,815
FAO
804,215 4,278,200 4,285,158 1,176,795 370,323
10,914,691
UNDPA 6,271,887 2,305,566 768,326
9,345,779
UNWOMEN
3,000,000
718,443 513,108 1,068,691 2,318,714 2,277,894
9,896,850
OHCHR
1,999,830 948,942 2,470,453 600,000 374,580
6,393,805
ILO
1,851,785 1,000,000 702,193 3,474,663 650,000
7,678,641
WFP 2,949,440 2,410,200 0
5,359,640
UNESCO
900,000
1,050,000 1,149,922 617,800 2,041,826
5,759,548
UN-HABITAT
750,000 921,761 2,000,000 291,575 481,500
4,444,836
UNIDO 1,050,000 900,000 0
1,950,000
UNODC
900,000 744,630 921,309
2,565,939
UNRWA 1,418,499 0
1,418,499
UNCDF 760,000 0
760,000
DPKO 550,000 294,464
844,464 WHO 65,869 ---------------- ---------------- ---------------- ---------------- ---------------- ---------------- ----------------
46,519,460
41,150,043
42,478,435
89,360,259
80,607,133
39,273,796 43,686,058
383,075,185
Note: Actual transfers are lower than approved Allocations due to time lag associated with project formulation.
PBF Cumulative allocations by status of UN presence, 2007 – 2013 (Sept)
Sierra Leone
CAR
Guinea-Bissau
LiberiaDRC
Nepal
Uganda
KyrgyzstanComoros Yemen
Guinea
Cote d'Ivoire
HaitiSudanSouth Sudan
Timor LesteGuatemala
ChadNiger
Kenya
MyanmarSri Lanka
SomaliaLibyaLebanon
Burundi
38% - In country with Special Political Missions ($163m)
29% - In country with Peace-Keeping Operations ($122m)
33% - UN Country Team ("non-mission" settings) ($141m)
Reporting and Planning Global 2013 PBF Review report (February 2014). Analysis and recommendations from
the independent investigation into PBF’s achievements and challenges against its 2010-
2013 Business Plan, including the functioning of country-based systems.
Secretary General’s Report on the Peacebuilding Fund 2013 (March 2014). A
country-by-country annual examination of PBF’s investments and results.
Multi-Partner Trust Fund Office’s Report on the PBF 2013 (May 2014). Financial
and results reporting according to PBF thematic areas, with special attention to RUNO
lessons learned and achievements.
Annual PBF Stakeholders meeting and presentation of next Business Plan (June
2014). Based on the 2013 Review, development of next three-year Business Plan. The
Stakeholders Meeting will be timed during the same week as PBC event.
24
2013 Peacebuilding Fund Review Purpose. Launched in July 2013 to assess the implementation of the PBF Business Plan 2010-
2013, in anticipation of updating the Plan for the next three years.
Broadly Consultative. In addition to feedback from an external Reference Group on key
deliverables, consultants provided updates to the PBF Advisory Group (October 2013) and the
PBF group of donors (November 2013).
Data Collection Progress. Country visits completed (Sierra Leone, Kyrgyzstan, Nepal, Comoros,
South Sudan, Liberia and Guinea); global survey completed; capital visits to top five PBF donors
(Canada, Netherlands, Norway, Sweden and UK); more than 100 interviews with key stakeholders
beyond the country visits.
Schedule. First draft anticipated mid-January 2014, with finalized Report expected in February
2014. Subsequently, PBSO will organize consultations with donors, the Advisory Group and other
stakeholders as to PBSO’s proposed approaches going forward.
25
Evaluation CoverageCompleted evaluations by end of 2013:
2010 (2): Burundi, Liberia
2011 (6): The Comoros, Guinea-Bissau, Nepal, Sierra-Leone, Sri Lanka,
Timor Leste
2012 (4): Kyrgyzstan, Central African Republic, Guinea, Uganda,
2013 (4): Burundi, DRC, Lebanon, Liberia
26
Beginning in 2014, the PBF M&E Unit will manage all evaluations of PRF portfolios to ensure quality, timeliness, and a specific substantive focus on assessing the higher-level peacebuilding contribution of the Fund’s investments.
The New Deal Dashboard (NDD)
EU-funded pilot project in Liberia with PBSO to track financing for
peacebuilding Project funded by the EU ($700k). Started in
2011 and NDD officially launched September 2013
NDD is an online tool for monitoring peacebuilding assistance with each project mapped to a PSG
It draws on data from existing AIMS which now captures almost all donor assistance
A group of Liberian experts assessed each project’s relevance to peacebuilding which then NDD uses. Donors are invited to validate the “ranking”
1 of 4
How the NDD can help…
The NDD creates accountability and transparency around peacebuilding
It provides a “peacebuilding lens” on other frameworks such as the PRSP and the support to government sectors
It supports peacebuilding sector working groups and enables priority-setting
It helps stakeholders plan for UNMIL transition and identify PB gaps
It helps us figure out if we’re doing the right things in the right sectors in the right places
4 of 4