WATCH | The inclusion rebellion: winning the communication battle

As the Ukraine–Russia conflict unfolds online like no other war to date, it urges us to reassess what we think we know about the humanitarian communication landscape.

On 11 May 2022, at OCHA’s Humanitarian Networks and Partnerships Weeks (HNPW), CDAC Network hosted a session to challenge assumptions on how misinformation proliferates. With our panellists, we explored how we can move away from a ‘one size fits all’ response to the info-crisis towards solutions that are inclusive and tailored.

Watch the event recording above or on our YouTube channel.

Our panel:

  • Loretta Hieber Girardet (moderator), United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction

  • Dylan Winder, UK Mission in Geneva and UK Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office

  • Dr. Wunpini F. Mohammed, College of Journalism & Mass Communication, University of Georgia

  • Sudhanshu Shekar Singh, Humanitarian Aid International

  • Jessica Alexander, The New Humanitarian


Key points from our panellists are captured in our Twitter thread:


During the event, we asked our audience: ‘What are the key challenges that humanitarians face in the new communication and information landscape?’

This word cloud captures their answers, with some of the most popular being:

  • Clarity of mission

  • Lack of understanding

  • Fear of sharing


The hybrid event took place in Geneva and online, and also featured a video intervention from Emily Dwyer, founder and co-director of the Edge Effect. Emily’s intervention (below) challenged humanitarian organisations to go much further in including LGBTIQ communities in countering harmful rumours and designing communication and community engagement programmes.


To hear about future CDAC Network events, follow us on Twitter @CDACN and LinkedIn and subscribe to our newsletter.

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What to consider when designing your CCEA response for the Ukraine crisis