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CDAC Network | Information is aid
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CDAC Network | Information is aid

Author: CDAC Network

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CDAC Network is the global alliance committed to ensuring people can access safe, trustworthy information during crises. In our podcast we'll have conversations about the big issues in communication, accountability, community engagement and participation.

We'll talk about topics, such as how harmful information is impacting communities and aid responses, how digital innovations in community engagement are shifting the power, and if AI advancements in humanitarian action are including communities affected by crisis - CDAC speaks to the key experts and members who are dealing with these critical issues.
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In an era where digital networks amplify both truth and falsehood at unprecedented speeds, humanitarian organisations face mounting challenges in maintaining operational integrity and public trust. CDAC Network's panel at Humanitarian Networks and Partnership's Week (HNPW) 2025 examined the intricate relationship between disinformation and humanitarian accountability, and explored how false narratives can impede aid delivery, compromise community relationships, and distort public understanding of humanitarian crises. Drawing from experiences in contexts like Sudan and Ukraine, our panel explored practical solutions for maintaining transparency and trust while adapting to the accelerated pace of modern information flows. We ask the core question: how do we protect humanitarian integrity in an age of algorithmic amplification and strategic disinformation?Chair: Ila Schoop Rutten, Information Integrity Lead, CDAC NetworkPanel:Wala Mohammed, Independent Consultant and Digital Rights Activist in SudanChristina Willie, Director, Insecurity InsightsMariya Frey, Member of the Management Board, , Suspilne UkraineAmil Khan, CEO, ValentAlasdair Stuart, Senior Advisor, BBC Media ActionFind out more about CDAC at HNPW 2025, or our work on disinformation by visiting the website.
AI has the ability to accelerate safe innovation and change humanitarian action for the better. Yet, there is a real risk of an underfunded, overstretched humanitarian sector accelerating towards unsafe use of AI to reduce costs with serious unintended consequences for vulnerable populations.This live discussion comes from CDAC Network's panel at Humanitarian Networks and Partnerships Week 2025. It brings together a number of organisations in the tech-humanitarian space who are leading on harnessing AI in a way that puts people affected by crisis at the centre of these new technological developments. They discuss what is in the pipeline and what is needed to reshape responsible innovation in humanitarian action through clear standards, practical guidance, and ethical oversight.Chair: Helen McElhinney, Director, CDAC NetworkPanel: Aleksandra Berditchevskaia, NestaSarah Spencer, SAFE AI team leadGiulio Coppi, Access NowAnjali Mazumder, The Alan Turing InstituteMichael Tjalve, Humanitarian Al AdvisoryFor more information about the SAFE AI project or CDAC's other panels at HNPW, please visit the website.
As the crisis in Sudan intensifies and the global funding crises deepens, the relationship between international humanitarian organisations and local responders has become both crucial and complicated.CDAC's panel at Humanitarian Networks and Partnerships Week 2025 brought together international players, local organisations, and mutual aid groups to explore how information flows - or doesn't flow - between different levels of humanitarian response in Sudan. Through the lens of the ongoing crisis, panellists will examine practical challenges and emerging solutions in information, and power, sharing between "big aid" and "little aid."Chair: Eva Khair, Sudan Transnational ConsortiumPanel:Phuong T. Nguyen, UNICEFDr Zaza Johnson Elsheikh, BIMA GroupHisham Taha, Centre for Humanitarian and Development ExcellenceMukhtar Elsheikh, CDAC NetworkReem Gasim, Cash ConsortiumDaniel Ayliffe, FCDOAmmar Abumedian, NidaaTo find out more about CDAC Network at HNPW or our work on Sudan, visit our website.
As the humanitarian sector grapples with calls for localisation and decolonisation —now further complicated by the recent USAID funding freeze—how do we ensure innovations in community engagement genuinely shift power to crisis-affected populations? This Humanitarian Networks and Partnerships Week (HNPW) 2025 panel explores how different engagement methodologies - from radio to digital platforms - can either reinforce or transform existing power structures in humanitarian response. The discussion will critically examine what "innovation" truly means when communities are placed at the centre of humanitarian action, and how we can move beyond tokenistic participation to meaningful community leadership.Chair: Ila Schoop Rutten, CDAC NetworkPanel:Sophie Tholstrup, Director of Policy & Climate, Ground Truth SolutionsAlex Ross, Loop Lead, Talk to LoopEllie Kemp, Strategic Partnerships Director,, CLEAR GlobalNoor Lekkerkerker, CEO, UpinionQuito Tsui, Collaborator, MERL TechTo find out more about CDAC's other events at HNPW, visit our website.
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