Donor-recipient partnerships are those formed between United Nations agencies and disability-focused NGOs. Under such a partnership, organizations such as HI, CBM or CDD receive funding to provide targeted assistance to persons with disabilities in the camps and/or host communities, while simultaneously strengthening the capacities of the donor organization and its implementing partners through capacity-building and technical support.26 In most cases, the organizations agree on joint indicators and work plans, which facilitate collaborative efforts and accountability. Often these partnerships are of a strategic nature and entail a financial commitment of the donor to support the work of the disability-focused NGOs. In this case, the disability-focused NGO receives funding to procure and distribute assistive devices to persons with disabilities and to provide rehabilitation services. United Nations agencies and disability-focused NGOs sometimes also maintain some loose form of collaboration by which the disability-focused NGO provides capacity-building or technical support on an ad hoc basis, but without allocated project funding (a collaboration without allocated funding). These collaborations may follow up on previous partnerships or may lead to donor-recipient partnerships at a later time.