Drawing on six years of research, this synthesis report outlines practical ways to make aid in fragile drylands more flexible, locally grounded and effective.
Drylands are among the world’s most fragile and strategically important regions, yet aid systems continue to struggle to deliver lasting impact in these contexts. As humanitarian needs rise and funding shrinks, Aid at a crossroads argues that the challenge is not simply to do more with less, but to fundamentally rethink how aid works in crisis-affected drylands.
Drawing on six years of SPARC research across East and West Africa and the Middle East, the report shows that conventional, technocratic models of aid - designed for stability and predictability - are poorly suited to environments defined by uncertainty, climate shocks and conflict. While emergency assistance saves lives, an over-reliance on short-term responses has too often failed to address the underlying drivers of vulnerability or to support the systems that people already use to cope with crisis.
Written primarily for implementers, policy-makers and funders, Aid at a crossroads sets out practical ways to work differently: strengthening local capacities to navigate uncertainty, embedding flexibility into how aid is funded and delivered, and embracing the complexity of drylands contexts rather than trying to simplify them away. It is accompanied by a sister report, The drylands of tomorrow: pathways to prosperity, peace and resilience.