The problem: Localisation is being handed to local organisations without the data layer that makes it work.
For most local and national NGOs, funding, reporting systems, and compliance support all arrived through the same international intermediary. As those intermediaries cut back or withdraw, local actors inherit the responsibility for delivery and accountability — but not the infrastructure that carried it. They are now expected to meet the same donor reporting and due-diligence standards as a well-resourced INGO, with none of the systems that INGO used to meet them. Without a deliberate transfer of data capability, localisation will be measured not by what was localised, but by what quietly stopped being reported.

For a decade, the humanitarian sector has agreed on where power should go. The 2016 Grand Bargain set a clear target: 25% of humanitarian funding should reach local and national organisations as directly as possible. Ten years on, the figure has never climbed out of low single digits — it sat at roughly 4.5% in 2023. Then, in 2025, the funding crisis did what a decade of summits could not: it forced the question of localisation to the top of the agenda — for the worst possible reason.

With international budgets collapsing and INGO field offices closing — 81 organisations had shut at least one office by April 2025 — local organisations are being asked to step into roles their international partners can no longer afford to play. But the funding is not the only thing that was flowing through those international intermediaries. So were the systems: the reporting templates, the data tools, the compliance know-how, the back-office that turned field activity into something a donor would accept. Those are disappearing at exactly the moment local actors are being asked to take over.

Download White Paper #2: When Localisation Lost Its Data Layer