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Topic
How can community needs inform outbreak response in humanitarian settings? Learning from new evidence.
Description
This 90 minute webinar provides an accessible window into new evidence generated relevant to the COVID-19 crisis through cutting edge, primary research in several humanitarian crisis setting, identifying key priorities emerging on humanitarian needs, and pulling out common messages for humanitarian audiences. A key focus will be the priorities, needs and perceptions of people affected by humanitarian crisis and how new evidence on their needs, and new tools for collecting this evidence, can be used/ applied during outbreak response.
Time
Jun 9, 2022 02:00 PM in
London
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Hi there, You are invited to a Zoom webinar. When: Jun 9, 2022 02:00 PM London Topic: How can community needs inform outbreak response in humanitarian settings? Learning from new evidence. Register in advance for this webinar: https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_RKd93V8KTVuWNdA_t7AYmA After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the webinar. ---------- Webinar Speakers Katie Rickard (Director of REACH @IMPACT initiatives) Katie is currently working as the Director of REACH for IMPACT initiatives, previously having worked as the Director of Country Programmes and Operations and the Head of Programmes for Africa and Europe at IMPACT HQ. In her HQ role Katie oversaw over 15 countries, conducting several country missions. Nigeria, Ethiopia, Somalia is some from the 15 countries she was focused on. Previously Katie also worked as a Country Coordinator in South Sudan in several research positions with REACH in the Middle East. Prior to joining REACH, Katie worked for the OSCE, conducting research, including country visits in Macedonia, Serbia, and Kosovo. Raissa Azzalini (Public Health Promotion Adviser @Oxfam) Raissa worked for more than 20 years in the Public Health Humanitarian sector responding and coordinating Public Health Promotion responses in various contexts and countries with Médecins Sans Frontieres (OCB). She supported their first established Global Public Health Promotion team when it became evident that more expertise was needed to the soft component of WASH responses. In 2010, Raissa joined Oxfam as a surge capacity for emergency responses before being a Public Health Adviser in the Global Humanitarian Team. She is passionate about the community engagement and how programme quality should be improved in humanitarian responses and therefore is leading on the Oxfam Community Perception Tracker approach. Nour Shawaf (Humanitarian Programme Coordinator @Oxfam Lebanon) Nour joined Oxfam in 2013 and is currently the Humanitarian Programme Coordinator in Lebanon. She worked in protection, policy, research and programme management in Lebanon and the region. Nour holds a Master of Arts in International Studies and Diplomacy from the School of Oriental and African Studies. She is passionate about raising the voices of marginalized populations through participatory methods in research and programming. Gillian McKay (Research Fellow & DrPH Candidate @London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine) Gillian McKay, MScPH, BSN, RN is a social scientist with a specialty in primary and secondary impacts of outbreaks of infectious disease. She is currently finishing her DrPH at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine on community engagement in Ebola. Gillian has worked with organizations such as WHO, the International Rescue Committee, Save the Children, and others in her 10+ years in humanitarian response. Ngonidzashe Nyambawaro (Inter-Agency Country Support Officer @Eastern and Southern Africa, Collective Service for Risk Communication and Community Engagement (RCCE)) Ngonidzashe is the Regional RCCE Surge Coordinator of East and Southern Africa Collective Services. He holds a Bsc Psychology, Msc Strategic Management, MPH degree and is PHD candidate. Ngonidzashe has taken part in managing complex emergencies in Ethiopia, Eswatini, Iraq, Liberia, Yemen, Zambia, and Zimbabwe. He is currently working in the ESAR region as RCCE Country surge support based in Pretoria. Fatima Osman (Head of Learning & Change @FCDO’s Monitoring & Evaluation of the Somalia Humanitarian, Resilience & Health Programme (MESH)) Fatima Osman specialises in M&E, Reporting, Adaptive Learning and Research across multiple sectors, including Governance/Democracy, Climate Change, Social Accountability, Gender, Livelihoods, Health, WASH, Conflict and Education programming. She is currently the Learning and Change Management Pillar Lead for FCDO’s humanitarian MEL partner in Somalia-MESH II, the Monitoring and Evaluation for Somalia Health and Resilience Programme. Fatima is an ardent believer in the power of information but only if it is backed up by appropriate action; she also has a deep fascination with water bodies and believes that her true calling is sailing and marine conservation. Jessica Camburn (Chair) (CEO @Elrha) As Elrha’s CEO, Jess has developed and led the organisation from its early beginnings in 2009 to its place today as a leading global actor in humanitarian research and innovation. Jess works closely with our Board of Trustees and leadership team to ensure we have the vision, strategy, talent, and experience to deliver transformative results in humanitarian action. Jess serves on a number of strategic Boards for UK research and innovation, including the UKs Disaster Research Group, and the Strategic Advisory Group for the Global Challenge Research Fund. Jess is passionate about challenging the lack of investment in research and innovation in the humanitarian system and is committed to working with others to make sure the challenges faced by people affected by crises get the attention they need, so they can be addressed by the very best that global science, research, and innovation can offer.
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