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Policy brief

Ten ways to create people-centred early warning systems in conflicts and recurrent crises

This brief looks at what ‘people-centred’ EWS means, particular challenges of improving it in conflicts and recurring crises, and the implication of a knowledge-system way of thinking about EWS.

Publisher SPARC
By Emma GogertySimon Levine

Page contents

Investments in early warning systems (EWSs) over the last decades have brought huge improvements in the provision of forecasts, particularly those based on hydrological-meteorological data. The current concern, for example through the ‘Early Warnings for All’ initiative, is to ensure that this information serves the needs of everyone. This will be a particular challenge in conflicts and places suffering recurring crises, the very places where people most need early warning information. 

Over the past five years, much of SPARC’s research in conflicts and recurring crises has generated learning relevant to this challenge. This policy brief synthesises SPARC’s learning related to EWS. It does not offer a comprehensive analysis of all work on people-centred EWS in fragile situations of conflict and recurring crises. We looked at all SPARC publications, and distil all the findings and recommendations relevant to EWS in conflicts and recurring crises. 

Findings 

For early warning to serve its purpose, it is not enough to generate timely and accurate forecasts. A people-centred EWS must maximise the chances that people will receive, understand, interact with, trust and act on the information that they need. This takes an EWS out of the purely technical world because it is necessary to understand and address how and where people access information, what makes them trust and share it, what makes them act on information and what constraints they may face in doing so. This makes the design and operation of an EWS partly a social function, requiring social expertise and the involvement of a range of actors who form part of a society-wide knowledge system, many of whom do not think of themselves as part of the EWS. 

Policy implications 

  1. In places affected by conflict, EWS must consider how conflict, insecurity and state fragility shape vulnerability. Conflict also affects what can be done and who benefits from it, so conflict analysis must inform all decision-making.
  2. People’s circumstances and information needs vary too much for prescriptive advice to be generally helpful. An EWS must encourage people to think about options and how to cope with uncertainty. Strengthening also means creating more spaces for ideas to be exchanged and reflected on, so that people can make more informed decisions for their own situations.
  3. A people-centred EWS must maximise the chances that people will receive, understand, interact with, trust and act on the information that they need. To serve the most marginalised, efforts are needed at every stage to prioritise their interests, understand their information needs and build trust with them.
  4. Supporting a people-centred EWS does not mean creating a perfect technical system for forecasting. It is about improving the knowledge system – how people receive and share information about what is forecast. This requires social, political, institutional and knowledge management skills.
  5. The next shock is unlikely to look exactly like previous shocks because everything is constantly changing in insecure places. A rigorous EWS is useful but it is risky to rely on it. Flexibility is essential. It is good to keep one eye on the data dashboard but necessary to keep the other eye on what is happening outside the window.
     
A woman walks through goats grazing in front of a hut
Village in Chad
Credit © mbrand85 / shutterstock

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