Posts Tagged ‘Haiti’

Are Haiti-donations hurting fundraising for other project?

Thursday, February 4th, 2010

In his article about aid to Haiti, Alexander Glück predicted that “Initiatives that aren’t engaged in Haiti will see a slump.” We have been discussing this question as well on our team, and analysing the impact at betterplace.org.

More donations for Haiti means more donations for other projects
What we’ve seen is actually that the opposite prognosis is the case! Compared to previous months, the numbers between the 15th and 26th of January 2010 show very clearly that many people who have donated to aid in Haiti have at the same time decided to donate to other projects at betterplace.org. Once they’re on our platform in the mood to help, they browse through other projects that may not have anything to do with emergency aid and click on the Donate button!

Apparently, engagement is not just a zero-sum-game. And that makes us happy!

Five Prognoses on Aid to Haiti – by Alexander Glück

Wednesday, January 20th, 2010

Following the catastrophe in Haiti, many donations have been made over betterplace.org for organisations that work with emergency aid, from Care International by way of the German Red Cross to the Alliance Action German Aid. Our guest blogger Alexander Glück takes a critical look at this topic. Of course, probably not everyone on the betterplace team shares his five theses, but we find it important to take a look at this particular perspective on emergency aid and we are excited to hear your responses as well:

The moment one has written a critical book about the donation market, the next moment next large donation campaigns are confirming the social giving mechanics that I have described in “The Marketed Responsibility” (Essen: Stiftung & Sponsoring, 2009). If the claims in that book hold true, then one will also have to allow the following prognoses regarding coming developments:

1. There will be new records in giving. But that won’t initially provide emergency relief.

The media tells daily of the overwhelming donation response that has surpassed all expectations, while simultaneously flashing on the screen the donation account numbers, together with strong visual images of suffering. Public heads such as Anne Will, Thomas Gottschalk and — as a columnist for the Bild newspaper — Angela Merkel, apply pressure to the already-existing call for ever-more donations — donations with as few strings attached as possible so as to ensure the most efficient application.

The problems with earthquake areas, however, are more logistical and technical in nature, as the needed resources are already in large part available. The media’s suggestions notwithstanding, a financial payment of any amount does not save a single child buried under the rubble.

2. Haiti is facing a profound structural change

The funds acquired won’t finance immediate aid, but will rather go toward initiatives for long-term reconstruction projects. Which is all well and good, except that it will never be discussed. Distribution and allocation conflicts will be the result, and without a functioning structure, unjust allocations and benefits will inevitably occur. Add to this the substantial roll of Haiti’s oligarchy, which before the catastrophe lived at the expense of the majority population, and which will in the future further attempt to allocate the funds according to such a structure. The coming changes can breakdown old structures of exploitations in order to build new ones in its place.

3. Initiatives not engaged in Haiti will see a slump

Whoever is donating to Haiti is not going to donate to another initiative. Donations for long-term aid in Haiti are now so important that, in the in the current donation frenzy, they threaten to overshadow many other equally-urgent projects; such projects will consequently see a clear decline in giving toward their causes, since after giving generously to Haiti, many donors won’t make the decision to give toward yet another project.

4. Incompetent initiatives will propagate the Haiti issue

We saw it during the Tsunami catastrophe of 2004. Fundraisers and advertising agencies crowded in to adopt the cause in order to increase their own donation profits. This will happen again, though most of these initiatives are incompetently prepared to engage this realm of aid, therefore eventually risking a considerable loss of prestige to their organisations.

5. Haiti will come more firmly under U.S. control

For the time being, the United States’ military presence in Haiti is ensuring the necessary structures to quickly and effectively distribute needed relief. The almost invasion-like arrival of the U.S. soldiers in Haiti will in all probability last for two decades and after awhile, won’t have anything to do anymore with aid to the earthquake victims.

Alexander Glück www.der-spendenkomplex.de.tt

The Ushahidi Situation Room: real-time map of the catastrophe

Wednesday, January 20th, 2010

New digital technologies are enabling radical possibilities in catastrophe situations (apart from the fact that they are able to enlist record-high donations via online donations, text-messages etc.) . Take a look at the Haiti Crisis Map from the Ushahidi Situation Room. Just in the last few days, it lists hundreds of messages updated almost in real-time, indicating, for instance the ruins containing trapped victims: “The school behind St. Gerard still has people buried in it. Unclear if alive or dead” and those trying to find missing friends and acquaintances” or “Looking for the entire Bontemps family in Haiti (Father Dr. Sainfard Bontemps).

They describe concrete assistance from onsite aid organisations: “MSF is starting to truck drinkable water to Choscal hospital for the patients and the people nearby” as well as acute needs and bottlenecks: “St. Marc: We are receiving a lot of surgery cases. We have operating rooms, nurses, equipment but no surgeons.” Visitors to the website have the possibility to verify individual reports.

Ushahidi originated during the crisis following Kenya’s 2008 election and is an open source platform making collective crisis information accessible. On the Haiti Crisis Map, the information comes from diverse channels located onsite—from the people in Haiti who post a report on the Ushahidi website, to those posting over SMS, blogs, emails, radio, twitter, Facebook, television and list-serves.

But Ushahidi doesn’t just leave the crowdsourcing to manage itself. An active team of volunteer workers (including students from Tufts Fletcher School as seen in this video) coordinates and organises the information.

You can find an interesting interview with Patrick Meier from the Ushahidi Team on the TED Blog.



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