CCCM Brief
CCCM Brief
CCCM Brief
The mission of CCCM is to ensure equitable access to services and protection for
displaced persons living in communal settings, to improve their quality of life and
dignity during displacement, and advocate for solutions while preparing them for life
after displacement.
The CCCM unit supports field operations with tools, guidance and capacity building to coordinate and
manage displaced populations effectively.
CCCM methodologies are applied in communal displacement settings; collective centres, camps
(spontaneous and planned), camp-like settings, and communal settlements. It should be remembered
that camps and communal settlements are temporary sites that should be established only as a last
resort.
DEFINITIONS
The Cluster Approach was adopted by the Inter-Agency Standing Committee in 2005 as a means to
strengthen predictability, response capacity, coordination and accountability by strengthening
partnerships in key sectors of humanitarian response, and by formalizing the lead role of particular
agencies/organizations in each of these sectors.
As the camp management and camp coordination sector is essential in almost all emergencies, a new
CCCM Cluster was created. It was acknowledged that how camp management is done is crucial to the
quality of life, dignity and future sustainable solutions for the IDPs and for ensuring that life in a
communal setting constructively prepares individuals for life after displacement. At global level,
UNHCR and IOM are the CCCM co-cluster lead agencies. UNHCR leads the cluster for conflict situations
and IOM for natural disasters.
The following roles and responsibilities have been agreed upon to ensure effective response at all
levels:
KEY PRINCIPLES
The key issues for CCCM are to:
Create access and delivery of humanitarian services to communal settings
Ensure effective coordination of humanitarian services and actors in communal settings
Identify gaps and needs in terms of protection and assistance in and among communal
settings
Provide partners with systematic information on residents (mindful of the importance of sex-
and age-disaggregated data), humanitarian services and gaps in collective settings
Ensure that assistance and protection is provided uniformly in all communal settings in line
with common technical standards and policy guidance
FIELD SUPPORT
The CCCM cluster supports the field by providing the following:
• Surge capacity/deployment of CCCM experts to complex emergencies
• Technical guidance and advice to CCCM clusters activated in field operations
• Short term diagnostic or technical missions
• Training: A roster of interagency trainers to facilitate CCCM and camp
management trainings at regional and field level
PARTNERSHIPS
UNHCR and IOM are the co-chairs of the CCCM cluster. Other partners include:
• CARE International
• Danish Refugee Council (DRC)
• Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC)
• International Rescue Committee (IRC)
• Lutheran World Federation (LWF)
• Shelter Centre
• OCHA
• Catholic Relief Service (CRS)
The CCCM Cluster aims at fostering strong partnerships in all aspects of its work. Stand-
by agreements with NRC, DRC and Shelter Center and several others support CM and
CCCM deployments to the field and all tools are developed with partners as the driving
forces.
RESOURCES ON CCCM
Guidance on CCCM issues are provided in:
Camp Management Toolkit, 2009
Collective Centre Guidelines, 2010
CCCM section in the IASC Gender Handbook
CCCM chapter in the IDP Protection Handbook