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From Silos to Synergies: Partnering for Social Cohesion in the Sahel

The Sahel Resilience Partnership (SRP) is a German government-funded initiative that unites two United Nations entities and Germany’s international development agency to address converging crises in Burkina Faso, Chad, Mali, Mauritania and Niger.

The SRP is an example of the operationalization of the humanitarian–development–peace (HDP) nexus. The partners use coordinated, multisectoral programming covering food and nutrition security, climate-resilient ecosystems, social services and conflict resolution to enhance resilience to shocks and foster social cohesion. Key strengths include a multilevel steering structure and an adaptable joint regional plan.

However, the SRP faces persistent operational challenges, notably navigating political instability and governance issues in the Sahel. Additionally, coordinating across agencies with different mandates, budgets, timelines and set-ups complicates efforts to achieve thorough geographical and programmatic convergence. The SRP and other organizations at the HDP nexus need to deepen complementarity, proactively share data and—where possible—seek operational convergence at the village level.

Table of contents

I. Introduction

II. Humanitarian–development–peace nexus approaches in the Sahel: Why they matter

III. The Sahel Resilience Partnership: Strengths and challenges

IV. Conclusions and ways forward

ABOUT THE AUTHOR(S)/EDITORS

Dr Simone Bunse is a Senior Researcher in the SIPRI Food, Peace and Security Programme.
Dr Caroline Delgado is a Senior Researcher and Director of the Food, Peace and Security Programme at SIPRI.
Rachel Blair is an intern in SIPRI’s Food, Peace and Security Programme.