- Editorial, Véronique de Geoffroy
- Humanitarian aid now has its quality standard: progress and issues at stake for field actors, Magali Mourlon
- Certification: an over-simplified understanding of aid quality?, Hélène Juillard
- Integrating complexity and uncertainty into the quality debate, François Grünewald
- Contrasting views – including ‘Neutrality’ in the CHS, Anne de Riedmatten & Nigel Timmins
- Improving quality, standardisation and the role of funding agencies, Luciano Loiacono
- Relations between national authorities and humanitarian organisations: an aspect of quality which is too often forgotten, Charles-Antoine Hofmann
- Humanitarian NGOs: winning back public trust, David Eloy
- Peer review – a way for the humanitarian sector to learn and improve, Julien Carlier & Hugues Maury
- Learning and humanitarian organisations: A ‘Golden Age’ of learning?, Paul Knox-Clarke
- How information management systems can help in the adoption of a Quality approach, Olivier Sarrat
- Events in “Humanitarian aid on the move” No. 15
- Bibliography on Quality of Aid
Humanitarian Aid on the move No. 15
27/04/2015
The issue of quality is back on the international aid agenda with the launch of the Core Humanitarian Standard (CHS), the ideas and proposals from the SCHR’s certification project and the preparatory work for the World Humanitarian Summit, notably on aid effectiveness [...].