Cash and Voucher Assistance (CVA) is a device in the humanitarian toolbox that, when provided to families, gives them flexibility to prioritise their own needs and manage their own recovery, rather than being dependant on in-kind hand-outs.
Financial management is often the domain of men in patriarchal societies and as a result, cash and voucher assistance can be perceived to carry more risks, especially relating to catalysing gender-based violence if the assistance is seen to contravene gender norms.
To ensure all of our beneficiaries, women and men, can make the most of the assistance provided, we must first understand the full implications of our project by consulting with them to understand the context within which they are living.
The stories documented in our report Safe Programming in the Design of Cash and Voucher Assistance – Lessons Learnt outline how using risk analysis tools can promote safe design and delivery of cash and voucher assistance, and the considerations practitioners needs to take into account when undertaking the assessment.