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The Tsunami Evaluation Coalition (TEC)[1] was a unique learning and accountability initiative in the relief and development sector. It was first established in February 2005 to carry out joint evaluations of the response to the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami.
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The TEC had over 50 member agencies from the United Nations, Non-Governmental Organizations, and the Red Cross, as well as private donors. These organizations have been working together since the TEC was established to:
The TEC was the most significant evaluation effort in the humanitarian sector since the Joint Evaluation[2] of the response to the Rwanda Crisis in 1994, and followed in the footsteps of Study 3 of that evaluation which examined humanitarian aid and its effects.[3]
The TEC was guided by a Core Management Group of about 15 members. The TEC was hosted by the Active Learning Network for Accountability and Performance in Humanitarian Action (ALNAP)[4] Secretariat in London.
The TEC produced a series of reports:
All the TEC reports can be found on the TEC website.[5]
The TEC published an initial findings report[6] in December 2005. These preliminary findings were based on initial reports from the more than fifty consultants involved in the field-work.
This report[7] synthesized the whole TEC evaluation effort. The foreword of the report was written by former US President Bill Clinton in his capacity as the United Nations Secretary-General's Special Envoy for Tsunami Recovery.
The four main findings dealt with:
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