Coordination, Deconfliction & Escalation
Freeze–Vote–Rebuild assumes distrust and recurring incidents. This chapter defines the coordination machinery that prevents incidents from becoming escalation spirals and ensures disputes are processed through predictable channels.
Objectives
- Prevent accidental clashes through reliable communication.
- Create fast, time-bounded incident handling.
- Reduce “retaliation-by-default” by providing a credible alternative.
- Make responses predictable through a pre-committed escalation ladder.
Core Components
1. Deconfliction Channels (Hotlines)
Minimum requirements:
- 24/7 hotline coverage.
- Named liaison officers on both sides (with alternates).
- Authenticated communications (prevents spoofing).
- Written protocols for what information can be shared.
- Logging of calls and outcomes (for audit).
2. Joint Incident Room (Coordination Cell)
Functions:
- Intake and triage of incidents.
- Dispatch and access coordination for monitors.
- Tracking of unresolved disputes and deadlines.
- Coordination of humanitarian corridors and repair windows.
3. Escalation Ladder (Pre-Committed Responses)
The escalation ladder defines what happens when incidents occur, based on:
- Severity classification (S1–S4).
- Confidence level (C1–C3).
- Recurrence/pattern detection.
The key is pre-commitment: responses are not improvised in the heat of events.
Incident Handling Workflow (Template)
- Report Received: From hotline, monitors, sensors, or observers.
- Immediate Safety Step: Deconfliction call if active risk exists.
- Triage and Classification: Preliminary severity and confidence assigned.
- Verification: Site access requested, evidence collected, corroboration obtained.
- Adjudication: Contested cases go to dispute mechanism with deadlines.
- Response: Apply ladder consequences (warnings → penalties → pauses/rollbacks).
- Publication: Report per the data governance policy.
Escalation Ladder Example (Illustrative)
Level 0: Routine Management
Applies to S1/C2+ or minor incidents:
- Log incident.
- Notify relevant liaison.
- Corrective action request.
- No change in phase status.
Applies to S2/C2+ or repeated S1:
- Written warning.
- Mandated corrective measures within deadline.
- Increased monitoring in affected sector.
Level 2: Targeted Consequences / Benefit Pause
Applies to S3/C2+ or repeated S2:
- Temporary pause of specific benefit tier.
- Additional inspections or access requirements.
- Mandated remediation plan.
Level 3: Phase Pause / Rollback Trigger
Applies to S4/C2+ or sustained S3 pattern:
- Pause progression to next phase.
- Rollback of conditional incentives per pre-committed rules.
- Emergency governance council session within fixed timeframe.
Level 4: Termination / Major Enforcement Posture
Applies to systematic high-severity violations or monitor expulsion:
- Suspend framework implementation pending renegotiation.
- Initiate predefined external enforcement pathways (if any exist).
The precise ladder must be agreed and published in advance (except sensitive operational details).
Dispute Handling Integration
Disputes must be time-bounded:
- Rapid preliminary decisions to prevent escalation.
- Final decisions with published reasoning (privacy-aware).
See:
Coordination for Corridors and Repairs
The same coordination system should manage:
- Corridor openings/closures.
- Repair windows and worksite access.
- Engineer convoy notifications and protections.
(See Humanitarian Corridors & Protected Infrastructure)
Drafting Note
When implementing, include:
- A one-page “incident SOP” with contact trees and deadlines.
- A RACI matrix for who can declare an incident, who verifies, and who adjudicates.
- A public-facing summary of escalation levels and consequences (without sensitive details).