Accomplishments
INEE’s collective work has made strong contributions towards the realisation of the network’s vision. INEE is proud to highlight the following select accomplishments:
Click on each year to view accomplishments:
2008
Enhancing Institutional Coordination, Policy Dialogue and Advocacy
- The INEE Working Group on Education and Fragility was established as an inter-agency mechanism to coordinate diverse initiatives, catalyse collaborative action on education and fragility and engage with new, strategic education and cross-sectoral stakeholders, such as the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development’s Development Assistance Committee (OECD-DAC), the Association for the Development of Education in Africa (ADEA) and the Education For All (EFA) Coordination Team and Global Monitoring Report.
- INEE convened a Policy Roundtable on Education Finance in States Affected by Fragility at the European Commission that brought together a diverse group of 45 representatives from donor agencies, UN and NGO practitioners, government representatives and researchers/academics.
- The INEE Policy Roundtable’s discussion and recommendations influenced a broader discussion on issues of financing education in states affected by fragility, including inputs into the Norwegian “EFA Forum: Financing of Education in Fragile Situations: Challenges and Innovations” and the Doha meeting on “Financing Education to Achieve the Education for All Goals”.
- INEE supported the Fast Track Initiative (FTI), including the development of a progressive framework resource package and support of the development of UNICEF/FTI Education Transition Fund.
- INEE Guidance Notes on Teacher Compensation were launched; they were developed in a widely consultative manner to address a critical challenge to quality education and provide a suggested framework for compensating and supporting teachers.
- Strategic support was provided to the Inter-Agency Standing Committee’s (IASC) Education Cluster through facilitating ways for the INEE membership to provide guidance, technical assistance, standards and tools in support of the implementation of the IASC Cluster Approach for greater quality, predictability and partnership. This, in turn, has increased the application of INEE tools in emergency contexts.
- INEE facilitated member input into the UN Special Rapporteur on the Right to Education’s report on Education in Emergencies and the Committee of the Rights of the Child’s Day of General Discussion on Education in Emergencies, which released recommendations for Member States and represents a new avenue for partnership to further the network’s vision.
Standard Setting, Knowledge Generation and Capacity Building
- INEE facilitated inter-agency Regional Capacity-Building Workshops for Asia and for Europe, the Caucasus and North America, which brought together 45 education and humanitarian practitioners and policy-makers from 26 countries to hone their skills for providing quality education in emergencies and recovery contexts, including developing national and regional plans of action.
- INEE Training of Trainers graduates, Capacity-Building Workshop graduates and INEE members facilitated more than 50 follow-up workshops on the INEE Minimum Standards in 2008, training over 1,000 staff worldwide. The INEE Secretariat provided training support, technical advice and materials to ensure quality.
- The INEE Minimum Standards Toolkit and Reference Guide were launched in partnership with the IASC Education Cluster to help field staff and Ministry of Education officials implement the standards; over 5,000 copies were disseminated to members around the world.
- Eighty-six respondents participated in the evaluation of the INEE Minimum Standards in Uganda and helped assess awareness, use, institutionalisation and impact for ensuring greater quality and predictability in inter-agency responses in education.
- INEE and the Sphere Project signed a Companionship Agreement, whereby the INEE Minimum Standards Handbook will be used as companion to the Sphere Handbook, Humanitarian Charter and Minimum Standards in Disaster Response.
- In partnership with the United Nations Girls Education Initiative (UNGEI), UNICEF and the International Rescue Committee (IRC) in Geneva, Switzerland, the INEE Gender Task Team/IASC Education Cluster Gender Working Group built the capacity of more than 20 participants from 18 countries to address gender inequalities in and through education in emergencies, post-crisis and contexts of fragility, which will result in a training pack for others to use in 2009 and beyond.
Network Services and Membership Development
- INEE now has more than 3,200 members, an increase of 40% over the past year, and continues to represent and be relevant to a diverse range of UN and NGO practitioners, government officials, donors, academics, youth leaders, teachers and students from around the world.
- In 2008, members engaged more actively than ever before with INEE, which is illustrated through its expanded number of participatory bodies: two Working Groups (Minimum Standards and Education and Fragility), five thematic Task Teams (Adolescents and Youth, Early Childhood Development, Gender, HIV/AIDS, Inclusive Education and Disability) and four Language Communities (Arabic, French, Spanish, Portuguese).
For more information about the work INEE undertook in 2008 please click here to download the 2008 annual report.
2007
Global Coordination
- Through INEE and its members’ high level advocacy, the UN Inter-Agency Standing Committee (IASC) established an Education Cluster that will help to ensure that education is included within all humanitarian response.
- INEE played a significant part in the Education Cluster Advisory Group, providing technical assistance, standards and tools in support of the implementation of the IASC Education Cluster.
Training and Capacity Building
- Over 50 trainers were trained through two INEE Minimum Standards regional Training of Trainers Workshops in Central and South America.
- More than 95 follow-up workshops have been conducted by Training of Trainer graduates globally, training over a thousand staff worldwide.
- Over 70 education and humanitarian practioners and policy makers from 21 countries in Anglophone and Francophone Africa came together to participate in capacity building workshops on the INEE Minimum Standards and developed national and regional plans of action.
Inter-Agency Resource Development
- INEE members advocated for and developed education sections within two major global humanitarian resources. The IASC Guidelines on Mental Health and Psychosocial Support in Emergency Settings and the IASC Gender Handbook in Humanitarian Action will be used throughout the humanitarian community.
INEE Minimum Standards Research, Evaluation and Implementation Support
- Over 300 INEE members and key partners helped to assess awareness, utilisation, institutionalisation and impact of the INEE Minimum Standards through participation in a global evaluation and an evaluation in Pakistan.
- Development of the INEE Minimum Standards Toolkit, containing the INEE Minimum Standards Handbook, training and promotional materials and translations, as well as hundreds of the most practical field-friendly tools, guidelines, checklists, case studies and good practices linked to specific Minimum Standards.
Network Growth
- INEE now has over 2,300 members, an increase of 64% over the past year, and continues to represent a diverse range of UN and NGO practitioners, government officials, donors, academics, youth leaders, teachers and students.
For more information about the work INEE undertook in 2007 please click here to download the 2007 annual report.
2006
Global Coordination
- The UN Inter-Agency Standing Committee approved the application of a cluster approach to the education sector as a result of INEE’s advocacy and mobilisation of members and partner organisations.
Training and Capacity Building
- Over 175 trainers were trained in the INEE Minimum Standards regional Training of Trainers Workshops with additional workshops already conducted and planned by TOT graduates.
Policy Making
- INEE contributed inputs into donor, UN and NGO policy making processes through the coordination of two policy roundtables: 1) CIDA-INEE Policy Roundtable on Education in Emergencies, Fragile States and Reconstruction which called for policy coherence across different areas of work, the establishment of alternative financing mechanisms, and the institutionalisation and implementation of the INEE Minimum Standards; and 2) the Teacher Compensation in Fragile States, Situations of Displacement and Post-Conflict Return Roundtable which fostered consensus on the policy and practice challenges and the identification of next steps.
INEE Resource Development
- INEE developed a new and more user-friendly website containing relevant publications, training materials, good practice guides, lessons learned, case studies, policy briefs, country profiles and other helpful links launched and actively utilised by members.
Voices of Courage Awards Luncheon 2006: Celebrating achievements in promoting education in emergency situations
- The Inter-Agency Network for Education in Emergencies was honoured by the Women’s Commission for Refugee Women and Children at the annual Voices of Courage luncheon held in New York on Thursday, May 11th. This honor is a tribute to all of INEE’s members who are working to ensure the right to education in emergencies and post-crisis reconstruction.
- In addition to INEE, Christiana Thorpe, Aziza Ishaqzai and Microsoft were also honoured.
- For more information about this event and the honourees, please visit the Women’s Commission website.
For more information about the work INEE undertook in 2006 please click here to download the 2006 annual report.
Pakistan 2006, Save the Children UK