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Non-DAC donors and humanitarian aid

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Report Synopsis

This report analyses the changing patterns in non-DAC donor development and humanitarian financing, focusing specifically on the key players and the changing trends in delivery and recipient allocation. It attempts to go beyond the numbers by providing some context to the data to try and understand why these government donors allocate humanitarian aid in the way that they do and the influencing factors. Finally, it looks at the various levels of non-DAC donor reporting and the transparency of the aid information available.

An excel spreadsheet of the data is available here.

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File Size: 1.96 MB

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In the past few years the role of ‘non-DAC donors’, a group of donors that sits outside the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD)’s Development Assistance Committee (DAC) member group, has gained great prominence and has generated much interest within the international development community. These donors are often referred to as ‘new’, ‘emerging’, ‘non-traditional’, ‘non-Western’ or ‘non-DAC’, but the labels applied to them simplify a very complex and diverse group.

Report Breakdown

Introduction

Highlights

Foreign assistance

Who are the main humanitarian aid donors?

Burden sharing

How is humanitarian aid spent?

Who are the main recipients?

Aid transparency

What is the future role of non-DAC donors?

Annex: basic concepts, definitions and data sources

Endnotes

Acknowledgements

Data & Guides