CURRENT SECTORAL ANALYSIS
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FSAU DONORS & PARTNERS

FSAU - Somalia,
3rd Floor, Kalson Towers,
Parklands, Nairobi.
PO Box 1230, Village Market,
Nairobi Kenya
Tel:
+254-20- 3741299,
3745734, 3748297,
3752062, 3752063
Fax:
3740598
Mobile:
0733-616881
0722-202146
Email:
fsauinfo@fsau.or.ke

 

Mission & Objectives   |   History   |   Institutional Relationships   |   Organizational Structure   |  

 

INSTITUTIONAL RELATIONSHIPS

FSAU is a project funded by the European Commission and USAID (donors), and implemented by the UN FAO.  The FSAU receives technical support from a number of core technical partners and services a wide range of clients / users, including the international development community and Somali people.  

The diagram below illustrates these institutional relationships, noting specific agencies involved in this current funding phase as well as the key inputs and outputs of the relationship.  


Donors
Current donors are the European Commission and USAID (with targeted money for the nutrition component).  The EC has committed to this fifth funding phase, which will last through March 2009; and USAID has committed through December 2006.  In addition to the financial contribution, donors also provide strategic direction in the form of initial project formulation, and on-going strategic guidance through the steering committee and negotiations with the implementing agency.  

Implementing Agency
The core donors have selected the UN FAO to be the Implementing Agency for the current funding phase.  As such, the FSAU is operationally and technically managed "in trust" by the FAO, although this does not imply agency ownership. The future vision for the FSAU is that it would be managed by Somali governing authorities.

The primary functions of the implementing agency are to provide operational and technical management to the FSAU.  Operational management includes ensuring adherence to proper financial, administrative, and personnel procedures in line with legal obligations of the donors and UN FAO.  Technical management includes provision of technical support on specific technical activities, strategic development, hiring decisions, and publications.

Technical Partners
While the FSAU has a strong technical team totaling 55 people in Somalia and Nairobi, there is an on-going need for technical inputs.  A number of Technical Partners have continuously provided technical guidance, inputs, and field support to FSAU activities.  The currently recognized Technical Partners include: FEWS NET, UNICEF, WFP, FAO, SCF-UK, OCHA, and CARE.  

Many NGOs and UN agencies intermittently provide support to, or a least have a strong interest in, the FSAU, and they can be recognized by explicit inclusion of the Somalia Aid Coordination Body (SACB) as a technical partner.  Somali authorities are and will increasingly be involved with FSAU activities in the form of: joint field assessments, key indicator monitoring, and joint analysis in seasonal projections and regular monthly sub-regional analysis (specific collaborations are currently being clarified).

FEWS NET has an exceptionally strong technical relationship with the FSAU in terms of coordinated work plans, frequent joint publication of reports, integrated technical expertise, and regular financial contributions to FSAU activities.  

While technical partners are encouraged to actively contribute to any and all FSAU technical activities, the final conclusions of FSAU analysis are the sole responsibility of the FSAU, and does not necessary imply endorsement of any particular agency unless otherwise stated.

FSAU and Technical Partners sign a joint Memorandum of Understanding to commit to these mutually supportive collaborations.

FSAU Field Partners
Action Contre la Faim (ACF)
Aktion Afrika Hilfe (AAH)
ADO
Africa Rescue Committee (AFREC)
AGROSPHERE
American Friends Service Committee (AFSC)
Somalia European Committee for Agricultural Training(CEFA)
German Agency for Technical Assistance(GTZ)
Candlelight
Cooperazione Italiana Nord-Sud (CINS)
CISP International Center for the Development of Peoples
Communities of Warberi, Hamrwein and Hamar
Concern Worldwide
Cooperazione Internazionale (COOPI)
Coordinating Committee of the Organization for Voluntary Service (COSV)
Gedo Health Consortium (GHC)
Horn of Africa Relief and Development Agency - Horn Relief
Horn of Africa Voluntary Youth Organization (HAVOYOCO)
Inter SOS
International Fund for Agricultural Development IFAD (Somaliland-Karan)
International Medical Corps (IMC)
Jabjab
KISMIA
Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF)-Belgium
Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF)-Holland
Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF)-Spain
Muslim Aid UK
NERAD
ODA
OXFAM
PACE Somalia Project
Pastoral and Environmental Network for the Horn of Africa (PENHA)
SAS
Save the Children Fund UK (SCF-UK)
Shilcon
Somali Volunteer Organization (SVO )
Somalia Red Cross Society (SCRS/ICRC)
Terra-Nova
VETAID (Health Animal - Health People)
Veterinaires Sans Frontieres (VSF-Suisse)
World Concern
World Health Organization (WHO)
World Vision
Zamzam Foundation

Clients / Users
The FSAU Clients/Users can expect to receive accurate and timely information on livelihoods, nutrition, and food security issues in Somalia so as to facilitate strategic decisions on immediate and long-term food security interventionsand make more effective the timely response and proactive.  FSAU clients/users fall into two main categories: (1) the international development community (UN agencies, NGOs, Donors, and the media), and (2) Somalia People (including local authorities, local NGOs, market traders, and Somali people themselves).

The clients/users currently receive information in the form of regular Monthly Briefs, Nutrition Updates, Market and Climate Updates, the FSAU Technical Series, regular presentations at SACB, the Humanitarian Response Group, and field coordination forums; and frequent ad hoc requests for information.  The FSAU is currently developing readily accessible information and data management systems (including a Digital Library of all reports, maps, and presentations related to Somali Livelihoods; a Spatial Database with all "mapable" data; and a Statistical Database).  The development of these data management facilities will allow for easy access to FSAU information.  

To further enhance accessibility of FSAU information to Somali clients, ongoing initiatives include: (1) posting of FSAU reports on numerous Somali web sites, (2) translation of FSAU key publications into Somali language, and (3) use of local radio to disseminate key messages to Somali people.