Shaping the future: Our strategy for research and innovation in humanitarian response.
People with disabilities and older people are disproportionately affected during humanitarian crises yet are often excluded from shaping the initiatives designed to assist them. Despite global frameworks advocating for disability inclusion, practical implementation remains a persistent challenge. Bridging this gap requires innovative solutions and actionable evidence.
To address these challenges, our Humanitarian Innovation Fund (HIF) launched the Meaningful Participation Innovation Challenge in July 2020. This initiative funded two groundbreaking projects in Indonesia and Ethiopia to develop, pilot, and assess mechanisms for enhancing the meaningful participation of people with disabilities and older people in humanitarian action.
Meaningful participation defined as enabling people with disabilities and older people to actively and effectively engage in decision-making across all stages of humanitarian programs—from design to evaluation. Participation must be free from barriers such as cultural stigma, communication challenges, or inaccessible environments, making it a matter of individual choice rather than imposed limitations.
Project 1: Localising Inclusive Humanitarian Responses (PIONEER) in Indonesia
This project established equitable partnerships between Organisations of Persons with Disabilities (OPDs), Older People’s Associations (OPAs), and local humanitarian organisations. It:
Project 2: Participatory Audits in Ethiopia
Focusing on “Nothing About Us Without Us,” this initiative involved older people, people with disabilities, and their associations in:
Both projects demonstrated transformative impacts:
This learning paper shares key findings and reflections to guide humanitarian actors in embedding meaningful participation into their practices. It highlights the importance of:
Download the full learning paper to explore actionable recommendations for advancing meaningful participation in humanitarian action.
Photo Credit: A worker with Tearfund talks to an older community member in Kigali, Rwanda. ‘Giving older people a voice’ Credit: Will Boase
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