Due to the current Ebola outbreak, we have decided to postpone this event to next year.
The CCHN is proud to announce its very first onsite Peer Workshop and Round Table Discussion on Negotiating Health Care in Crises for humanitarian professionals working in the health sector (medical and non-medical staff). The workshop will be hosted by the Jinja Centre for Reconstructive Surgery and Global Surgery at the Lamu Hospital.
This event is organised by the Center of Competence on Humanitarian Negotiation, a joint initiative of four humanitarian agencies (ICRC, MSF, UNHCR, WFP).Â
Language: EnglishÂ
Date: The event is postponed due to the Ebola outbreak
Location: Jinja, Uganda (onsite)Â
Cost: Free of charge. NB: The CCHN cannot cover the travel or accommodation costs of participants.Â
Maximum number of participants: 25Â
What will I learn?
This Onsite Peer Workshop (13 – 15 December) and Round Table Discussion (16 December) is specifically focusing on negotiating health care in crises. It aims at supporting humanitarian professionals working in the health sector – medical and non-medical staff – in planning and conducting negotiations with state and non-state military and civilian authorities, communities, patients etc.. By joining the workshop, you will learn how to analyse the environment in which the negotiation takes place, identify the role and influence of the stakeholders involved, and put in place different strategies to achieve your negotiation objectives. You will familiarise yourself with practical tools and methods to support your negotiation process, exchange with and lear from your peers, and test your negotiation skills during a simulation exercise.
During the round-table we will present our latest research on negotiating health care in crises and discuss the future of health care negotiations and collaboration between agencies.
The workshop is highly interactive: we invite participants to share their own experiences, discuss, join simulation exercises and learn from each other’s expertise.
What does “Peer Workshop” Mean?
Our workshops are not delivered by lecturers; they are based on the sharing of experiences among peers, with the support of our facilitators and experts. We invite you to discuss your own negotiation experiences to learn from and with each other. The workshops are highly interactive: our facilitators split participants into smaller discussion groups of 5-7 people. We encourage you to listen to others and reflect together on the many challenges of frontline negotiations.
Participants will remain connected over time through a private online forum where they can exchange and interact. If you would like to continue learning about frontline negotiations, you will get exclusive access to Specialized Sessions, Trainings of Facilitators, Peer Circle discussions, as well as thematic retreats.