Overview
The mission of protection clusters is to ensure well-coordinated, effective, and principled preparedness actions and responses, and that protection is at the core of all humanitarian actions and recognized as essential in any nexus with development and peace action to achieve solutions. Through such coordination, people are better protected in humanitarian crises and their rights respected and solutions found in accordance with international law. The protection cluster includes ‘areas of responsibilities' that are attributed to UNFPA for gender-based violence (GBV), to UNICEF for child protection, to UNMAS for mine action, and to NRC and UN-Habitat for housing, land and property (HLP). Recognizing that protection is central to the purpose of any humanitarian response, the protection cluster advises and provides continuous analyses of protection risks to the Humanitarian Coordinator (HC) and HCT, and works with all clusters to strengthen protection and rights-based responses.
Values and principles of the protection cluster include: 1) affected persons are at the centre and meaningfully participating in protection activities. Preparedness action and response are driven by the diversity of people affected by crises to whom we are accountable; 2) we are committed to humanitarian and protection principles, gender equality and inclusion; 3) field priorities guide our action while we embrace and respond to the diversity of our membership, from local to global actors; 4) we are forward-looking and readily adaptable to address growing and emerging protection challenges.
Relevance for emergency operations
IASC Clusters are created when existing coordination mechanisms are overwhelmed or constrained in their ability to respond to identified needs in line with humanitarian principles, which frequently occurs in emergencies. Clusters are activated as part of an international emergency response, in situations of internal displacement and natural disasters, based on an analysis of humanitarian needs, existing coordination mechanisms and capacity on the ground. Clusters are a temporary coordination solution and efforts should be made as soon as appropriate and possible to hand over coordination to the relevant authorities. Within the inter-agency humanitarian architecture, UNHCR is the lead agency for Protection, Camp Coordination and Camp Management (CCCM) and Shelter clusters for non-refugee humanitarian crises, including for internal displacement in conflict situations. Final arrangements at country-level should be dictated by operational circumstances, including the presence and capacity of protection actors. The three Clusters are complementary and can jointly increase the protection dividends and rationalize UNHCR programming. Our responsibilities and accountabilities in leadership and coordination require dedicated cluster coordination capacities which should be planned for accordingly.
UNHCR should recommend the activation of protection clusters when there are protection risks and needs and the government requires additional capacity for coordination of protection-related responses. According to the UNHCR Policy on Emergency Preparedness and Response (2023), in situations of conflict, UNHCR leads the Protection Cluster from the start of the emergency and leads or co-leads inter-agency efforts on AAP and participate in or (co-) lead PSEA. In cases of natural hazard-induced internal displacement, UNHCR assesses its capacity for operational response and cluster leadership, based on an adequate UNHCR in-country presence and in consultation with the government and other humanitarian actors as appropriate. If UNHCR is already leading the cluster for a conflict-induced emergency when a natural hazard event occurs, that leadership must be maintained. For cluster activation and cluster transition and deactivation, see IASC Reference Module for Cluster Coordination at Country Level.
Main guidance
In refugee situations, the clusters do not apply, and the response is coordinated within the framework of the Refugee Coordination Model (RCM). In mixed settings, the Joint UNHCR and OCHA Note on Mixed Situations: Coordination in Practice applies.
Support service delivery |
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Inform HCT strategic decision-making |
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Plan and implement Cluster strategies |
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Monitor and evaluate the response |
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Build national capacity |
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Support robust advocacy |
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AAP/Protection mainstreaming |
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Leadership and resources |
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Through the GPC Operations Cell, protection clusters at national level can access additional support through the Interagency Protection Support Desk and through emergency deployment rosters from UNHCR and stand-by partners. Support missions can be requested for short-term assistance on strategy development, capacity building, and specific programmatic or advocacy activities. UNHCR and the GPC, through its global network, can also provide targeted capacity building and resources, for example on IDP law and policy and on protection information management. Finally, protection clusters can access tools and guidance through the GPC web portal.
Post emergency phase
In situations of sudden-onset emergency, the review of cluster coordination architecture, transition and de-activation should take place within three months to ensure it is fit for purpose. The HC/HCT should ensure that clusters have developed an outline of a transition or de-activation strategy at 90 days after activation. In protracted crisis situations, the review should be done annually. More regular reviews are required if strategic response plans are revised to reflect changes in the humanitarian context. Where possible, reviews should be completed before the start of new strategic planning cycles. For cluster transition and deactivation, see IASC Reference Module for Cluster Coordination at Country Level.
Checklist
Core Functions of a Protection Cluster at Country Level (see, Field Coordination Package | Global Protection Cluster and IASC Reference Module for Cluster Coordination at Country Level)
Standards
Protection risks analysis and monitoring
The GPC and Protection Clusters regularly monitor and provide analysis on most critical protection risks. The GPC and its AoRs agreed on 15 standard protection risks to report against across emergency crises. These include:
1) Abduction, kidnapping, enforced disappearance, arbitrary or unlawful arrest and/or detention;
2) Attacks on civilians and other unlawful killings, and attacks on civilian objects;
3) Child and forced family separation;
4) Child, early or forced marriage;
5) Discrimination and stigmatization, denial of resources, opportunities, services and/or humanitarian access;
6) Disinformation and denial of access to information;
7) Forced recruitment, and association of children in armed forces and groups;
8) Gender-based violence;
9) Impediments and/or restrictions to access to legal identity, remedies and justice;
10) Presence of mines and other explosive ordnance;
11) Psychological/emotional abuse or inflicted distress;
12) Theft, extortion, forced eviction or destruction of personal property;
13) Torture or cruel, inhuman, degrading treatment or punishment;
14) Trafficking in persons, forced labour or slavery-like practices;
15) Unlawful impediments or restrictions to freedom of movement, siege and forced disappearance.
Dedicated guidance on agreed protection risks definitions is available here, and additional guidance and standards on protection analysis is available here.
Protection cluster severity of needs, people affected, in need and targeted
Protection Clusters contribute to the Humanitarian Programme Cycle (HPC), on a yearly basis, by providing a comprehensive needs analysis based on 'severity of protection needs'. The analysis and severity of needs guides the calculation of People in Need (PiN), which is one of the key deliverables for the Humanitarian Needs Overview (HNO).
At the Humanitarian Response Plan (HRP) stage, the Protection Cluster provides a narrative on its sectoral response, indicating how the latter contributes to the collective response to achieve the strategic objectives of the HRP. People targeted is one of the key deliverables of the HRP, which should be derived from the response capacity on the ground, physical access, etc. The HRP details the financial requirements and an overview of the monitoring objectives.
The Protection Cluster uses a set of standards such as the Protection Cluster methodology on severity/people in need and intersectoral analysis. These guidelines, together with the suggested list of indicators for need analysis, are available at HPC Guidance | Global Protection Cluster, and updated regularly.
Common Framework of Analysis for Protection Sector
The Global Protection Cluster, AoRs and Partners have endorsed a common Protection Analytical Framework (PAF). The PAF provides the common approach to organize data and information for robust, context-specific protection analysis. The PAF guides Protection Clusters and partners’ identification of most critical protection risks, to inform the identification of actions, resulting critical needs and dedicated advocacy efforts. The PAF guidance includes 1) an Introduction; 2) Specific tools; and 3) Guidance on the analysis process. The GPC provides regular updates on methodologies and tools here.
Protection Clusters, with the support of their AoRs, coordinate continuous joint-analysis. These processes inform strategy, planning and the Protection Clusters contribution to the Humanitarian Project Cycle. The analysis is regularly provided through Protection Analysis Updates (PAUs) which inform the Protection Cluster contribution to the overall analysis of HNOs and are used for the coordination of joint actions with protection partners and AoRs. The GPC has developed: 1) Standard formats and samples; 2) Annotated guidance, 3) A tutorial on protection risks analysis; and 4) A repository of PAUs published by operations.
A Protection Risk Analysis Training Package and an Introduction to Protection Analysis course have been developed with the support of the GPC Information and Analysis Working Group.
Annexes
Learning and field practices
Links
Main contacts
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