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Fit for Purpose: presenting the SDC's new structure
Pandemics, wars and climate change are among the greatest challenges of our time. It has long been the case that crises no longer come one at a time, but rather the longer crises go on, the more they overlap and reinforce each other. If we want to meet these challenges in the long term, we need networked approaches to solutions and an agile way of working.
The reorganisation is the result of in-depth analysis and the many years of experience of SDC staff in development cooperation. Accordingly, all employees were heavily involved. "We asked our staff in the external network and at the head office in Bern the following: ‘What do we have to do to make the SDC even more responsive to this new world order, and to our new partners in international development cooperation?’ This generated around 200 proposals and ideas," explains SDC Director General Patricia Danzi.
Bilateral development cooperation and humanitarian aid moving closer together
The result is a newly reorganised SDC that is more agile and flexible. The SDC is now divided into three geographical divisions, one thematic division and one multilateral division. The seven sections of the thematic division correspond to the priority themes of the International Cooperation Strategy 2021–24.
Humanitarian Aid and the Swiss Humanitarian Aid Unit (SHA) will continue to be managed as a separate division. "Bilateral development cooperation should be more closely linked with humanitarian aid, putting people at the centre," says Danzi.
There were no job cuts as part of the SDC's reorganisation. "The aim wasn't to cut posts, but rather to make the SDC more efficient as an organisation," explains Danzi.
"The SDC has highly competent and motivated staff who are widely dispersed. We were keen to find ways of making better use of that potential." This led to the reorganisation project – Fit for Purpose. "Our goal is to ensure that we are fit as a development organisation to work efficiently, quickly, effectively and flexibly in partner countries together with our partners."
Switzerland: a reliable partner that keeps its promises
Danzi notes that Switzerland has a long tradition of international development cooperation and is highly regarded as a reliable partner. Current contexts such as Afghanistan or Ukraine show the importance of the interplay between humanitarian aid and longer-term development cooperation.
“Thanks to our long-standing humanitarian tradition, we are highly regarded in our partner countries when it comes to sustainable development," explains Danzi.
(SDC/wi)
Links
IC: jobs, climate, migration and the rule of law
2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development
Organisation chart SDC ( PDF, 1 Page, 88.1 kB, English)
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