21,780 results on '"HUMANITARIAN ASSISTANCE"'
Search Results
2. Closing the planning gap: Evacuating people and animals
- Author
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Sawyer, James
- Published
- 2024
3. Distributionally robust multi-period humanitarian relief network design integrating facility location, supply inventory and allocation, and evacuation planning.
- Author
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Yin, Yunqiang, Wang, Jie, Chu, Feng, and Wang, Dujuan
- Subjects
HUMANITARIAN assistance ,MIXED integer linear programming ,INVENTORIES - Abstract
Facility location, supply inventory and distribution, and evacuation planning are key operational functions in a humanitarian relief network, it is critical to integrate these three functions and schedule their activities jointly in a coordinated manner. Considering uncertain demands and evacuation rates of injured people, we develop a distributionally robust model for the multi-period humanitarian relief network design with multiple types of relief supplies. To solve the problem, we reformulate the proposed model into a mixed integer linear programme, and develop an enhanced branch-and-Benders-cut algorithm that incorporates some algorithm enhancements to solve the resulting model. Extensive numerical experiments show that: (i) the distributionally robust model provides more reliable and flexible solutions that perform the best when faced uncertainty over the deterministic and stochastic models; (ii) the algorithm enhancements are very effective to enhance the performance of the proposed algorithm, which can reduce the CPU time by up to 9.75%∼41.64% on average; (iii) the integrated solution approach is more beneficial to solve the problem when comparing with a sequential solution approach; and (iv) some model parameters have significant impact on the solution structure, which can help decision maker set proper parameters to achieve the desired trade-off among the considered metrics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. МЕДИЧНА ДОПОМОГА НАСЕЛЕННЮ ЯК ЧИННИК РЕІНТЕГРАЦІЇ ТИМЧАСОВО ОКУПОВАНИХ ТЕРИТОРІЙ УКРАЇНИ
- Author
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Б. О., Логвиненко
- Subjects
RIGHT to health ,REGIONAL medical programs ,MEDICAL personnel ,INTERNALLY displaced persons ,HUMANITARIAN assistance - Abstract
The article is devoted to highlighting the importance of medical care for the population as a factor in the reintegration of the temporarily occupied territories of Ukraine. In accordance with this goal, the essence and peculiarities of health care organization in the de-occupied territory are revealed, and the role of medical care in intensifying the reintegration mechanism is determined. The author emphasizes that the implementation of the state policy on reintegration of the temporarily occupied territories should provide for an appropriate mechanism that would combine various measures aimed at restoring state power in the respective territories, as well as at integrating the local population into the political, cultural, economic and social life of the country. The author emphasizes that by allowing temporary restrictions on the right to healthcare in general and medical care in particular, the State, represented by authorized entities, should provide an effective mechanism for restoring this right after the special legal regime is lifted, or provide appropriate guarantees for the exercise of this right during such a special period. The author identifies the circumstances that indicate the importance of medical care for the population as a factor in the reintegration of the temporarily occupied territories: a) ensuring access to medical care as a key priority; b) involvement of qualified medical personnel from among internally displaced persons, volunteers, representatives of international health organizations and foreign medical specialists; c) implementation of regional medical programs and activities; d) cooperation with international donor organizations to provide humanitarian assistance, prosthetics, rehabilitation, etc.; e) health education campaign to inform the population in a timely manner about medical guarantee programs, reimbursement of medicines, rehabilitation programs, etc. It is stated that taking into account these circumstances will not only promote understanding of the importance of medical care, but will also allow improving the reintegration mechanism and accelerating its implementation to improve the quality of life of people. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. The unsustainability of humanitarian aid in internally displaced people (IDP) camps in Nigeria.
- Author
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Agunyai, Samuel Chukwudi and Phago, Kedibone
- Subjects
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HUMANITARIAN assistance , *INTERNALLY displaced persons , *EARLY death , *REALITY television programs - Abstract
The Nigerian state is expected to perform functions critical to the protection of citizens against disasters and harmful emergency situations through effective management of humanitarian aid. However, the reality in Nigeria shows that the government is only interested in the relocation of internally displaced people (IDP) rather than their daily survival in humanitarian camps. In addressing this problem, this article examined the indicators, reasons, and implications of the unsustainability of humanitarian aid. It is believed that research in this direction would provide an understanding of a better approach to improving the sustainability of humanitarian aid. Drawing on the state fragility theory and mixed qualitative methods involving observations, interviews, and document analysis, the findings identified a lack of capacity to control violence causing displacement, weak institutional support, political will, and capacity to finance humanitarian aid as reasons why humanitarian aid is unsustainable in IDP camps in Nigeria. It also identified the depletion of host communities’ resources, untimely deaths, harmful coping strategies, and an increased rate of out-of-school children, among others, as the implications of unsustainable humanitarian aid. The findings suggest means through which the Nigerian government can sustain humanitarian aid in IDP camps in Nigeria. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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6. Social work students and teachers responding to internally displaced persons' need of shelter in Ukraine in spring 2022: Service learning and recognition.
- Author
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Cuadra, Carin Björngren, Wallengren-Lynch, Michael, Kokoiachuk, Yuliia, and Rapeli, Merja
- Abstract
In the spring of 2022, in response to the Russian invasion of Ukraine, social work teachers and students in Lviv provided shelter support to internally displaced people. This article explores the challenges faced as well as adapting pedagogy to the crisis. An online transnational collaboration and retrospective analysis approach was employed to gather information from the teachers and students. Through a descriptive analysis, informed by Honneth's theory of recognition and service-learning model pedagogy, the results highlight the complex challenges inherent in humanitarian assistance. This article contributes to a heightened understanding of the role social work plays in armed conflicts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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7. Seeing like a donor: the unintended harms of rendering civil society legible.
- Author
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Nwe Hlaing, Thu Thu, Wells, Tamas, and Décobert, Anne
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HUMANITARIAN assistance , *GOVERNMENT aid , *CIVIL society , *INTERNATIONAL agencies , *NEGOTIATION - Abstract
Following the Grand Bargain, there has been increasing focus on aid localisation and partnerships between international and local aid agencies. Yet there has been less scholarly attention on how and why international agency policies and partnerships can cause unintended harm to civil society organisations and their staff. Drawing on James Scott's seminal work Seeing like a State, and interviews with Myanmar civil society organisation leaders in 2023, this article argues that international agencies often attempt to render civil society "legible" through processes of systematisation and codification. However, these processes can in turn sideline accrued experiential and contextual knowledge, or metis, which is necessary for local organisations' survival, especially in times of instability. The article highlights several instances in Myanmar where the marginalisation of this more contextual knowledge results in unintended harms. The article concludes that international agencies' acknowledgement of metis is a crucial and yet still under-recognised pillar of aid localisation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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8. The US Southern Command and the Militarization of US-Latin America Foreign Relations.
- Author
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Forner, Clarissa N.
- Subjects
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WAR on Terrorism, 2001-2009 , *WAR , *MILITARY missions , *HUMANITARIAN assistance , *POLITICAL elites - Abstract
This proposal aims to analyze the militarization of US-Latin America foreign relations by discussing the role played by the U.S. Southern Command in the implementation of U.S. foreign policy for the region in the aftermath of the September 11th 2001 attacks. Since the last decades of Cold War, civilian and diplomatic agencies stationed in the region, notably the State Department and the USAID, suffered budgetary constraints that were aggravated at the beginning of the Global War on Terror. For instance, in Latin America, the Southcom has been adapted to perform the so called "military missions other than war," including non-military functions such as the provision of humanitarian assistance, law enforcement, and the management of security assistance programs aimed to dismantle drug trafficking networks. As we intend to argue, the overreliance on security and military means reflects the militarized character of U.S. influence in the region and has impacts on how the local coercive systems are organized and deployed by the domestic political elites. By analyzing the annual posture statements and the initiatives conducted in the field by the Southcom, between 2001 and 2021, we hope to clarify how the violence structures from abroad are connected to those from within. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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9. Crime, culture or war? Justifying military responses to violence against civilians.
- Author
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Vorland Holen, Sine
- Subjects
- *
VIOLENCE , *SOCIOLOGY , *CIVILIANS in war , *HUMANITARIAN assistance , *MILITARY officers - Abstract
Interpreting violence against civilians is necessary for eliciting appropriate protection responses, yet the structuration processes through which military personnel make sense of observed violence are underexplored. This article draws on the experiences of Norwegian military officers, applying Boltanski and Thévenot's theory of justification to investigate how officers discern violence targeting unarmed individuals and justify their reactions. Although they frequently categorize violence into 'war', 'crime' and 'culture', employing civic, industrial and humanitarian logic structures, officers grapple with the realities that transcend such neat classifications. Rooted in the sociology of justification and violence, this article provides insights into how actors navigate plural violence in conflict and their struggles in making justifiable decisions that ultimately prepare the ground for action to take place. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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10. Understanding leadership challenges faced by humanitarian aid workers: insights from the experiences of NNPHL training participants.
- Author
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Nyarko, Godfred, Marnicio, Ariana, and Bollettino, Vincenzo
- Subjects
HUMANITARIAN assistance ,LEADERSHIP training ,TRUST ,BUREAUCRACY ,CURRICULUM - Abstract
This paper examines the self-reported leadership challenges experienced by humanitarian aid workers who participated in the National NGO Program on Humanitarian Leadership (NNPHL) Program. Data were drawn from NNPHL program participants describing leadership challenges they faced in their humanitarian work. Responses were analyzed qualitatively revealing 10 broad themes of leadership challenges: (1) organizational capacity and resource constraints, (2) managerial decision-making styles, (3) bureaucracy and external influence, (4) purpose, motivation, and influence, (5) coordination and cooperation, (6) trust and cohesion within teams, (7) staff well-being and burnout, (8) identity and diversity, (9) self-efficacy and confidence, (10) security. These findings were then situated in the broader literature on challenges identified in humanitarian aid contexts. Humanitarian aid workers offer valuable first-hand insights into the leadership challenges they face in their work. Understanding leadership challenges from the perspective of aid workers provides valuable insight that can be used to inform decision-making and policy development within humanitarian organizations. The findings can also help inform and shape the development of humanitarian training programs by tailoring humanitarian education curricula to address the challenges encountered by aid workers themselves. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Impact-based forecasting of tropical cyclone-related human displacement to support anticipatory action.
- Author
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Kam, Pui Man, Ciccone, Fabio, Kropf, Chahan M., Riedel, Lukas, Fairless, Christopher, and Bresch, David N.
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CYCLONE forecasting ,WEATHER forecasting ,HUMANITARIAN assistance ,LANDFALL ,POPULATION forecasting ,TROPICAL cyclones - Abstract
Tropical cyclones (TCs) displace millions every year. While TCs pose hardships and threaten lives, their negative impacts can be reduced by anticipatory actions like evacuation and humanitarian aid coordination. In addition to weather forecasts, impact forecast enables more effective response by providing richer information on the numbers and locations of people at risk of displacement. We introduce a fully open-source implementation of a globally consistent and regionally calibrated TC-related displacement forecast at low computational costs, combining meteorological forecast with population exposure and respective vulnerability. We present a case study of TC Yasa which hit Fiji in December 2020. We emphasise the importance of considering the uncertainties associated with hazard, exposure, and vulnerability in a global uncertainty analysis, which reveals a considerable spread of possible outcomes. Additionally, we perform a sensitivity analysis on all recorded TC displacement events from 2017 to 2020 to understand how the forecast outcomes depend on these uncertain inputs. Our findings suggest that for longer forecast lead times, decision-making should focus more on meteorological uncertainty, while greater emphasis should be placed on the vulnerability of the local community shortly before TC landfall. Our open-source codes and implementations are readily transferable to other users, hazards, and impact types. This paper proposes an open-source, impact-based forecast for tropical cyclone population displacement using both cyclone forecasts and population settlements and vulnerabilities. This is applied to Tropical Cyclone Yasa, striking Fiji in 2020. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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12. Humanitarianism vs Human Rights: a Practitioner's Perspective.
- Author
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Weingartner, Erich and Merriman, Kate
- Subjects
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HUMANITARIANISM , *HUMAN rights , *HUMANITARIAN assistance , *CRIME , *DUALISM - Abstract
The co-author of this article, Erich Weingartner, has worked internationally in both human rights and humanitarian aid. Based on his expertise, especially in the Korean peninsula, and on Lutheran theology, he analyzes the tensions between defending human rights and providing humanitarian aid, arguing that a crime and punishment paradigm cannot heal the divisions within our polarized world. The existential threats facing humanity require cooperation and reconciliation. He advocates abandoning dualism and confessing our own complicity in creating and perpetuating the current humanitarian and ecological crises. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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13. A diversionary benevolent media strategy: Lobbying Saudi Arabia's humanitarian aid in Arabic and English.
- Author
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Kertcher, Chen and Lewin, Roi
- Subjects
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HUMANITARIAN assistance , *NEWSPAPER publishing , *ROYAL houses , *ELECTRONIC newspapers , *INTERNET publishing - Abstract
Humanitarian aid is often accompanied by broad media coverage. In academic research, there is a dominant bias toward Western studies on the topic. Following studies that emphasize the negative role of autocratic regimes using their media to frame threats as an intra‐state diversionary strategy, this study contributes to our understating of how autocratic regimes use the media and illuminates how they employ a diversionary benevolent strategy in the media through framing humanitarian activities. We illustrate this theory by using the case of media strategy models used by the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA) that frame its provision of humanitarian aid to global and national audiences. The empirical approach is based on an analysis of 263 articles from four leading Saudi newspapers published online in English and Arabic. The result indicates that the KSA encourages two different diversionary benevolent strategies. The first strategy is aimed at increasing the KSAs international community prestige, focusing on mediatization that depicts its alliance with global efforts while employing "threat" strategy towards its adversaries. The second strategy is aimed mainly at Saudi nationals with the purpose of increasing their support of the royal family. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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14. How can artists help change the world? The simple question that changed my life.
- Author
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Black‐Nasta, Wendy
- Subjects
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PEACE movements , *SOCIAL justice , *NONGOVERNMENTAL organizations , *FUNDRAISING , *HUMANITARIAN assistance - Abstract
This article traces the journey of one artist's personal efforts on behalf of world peace. It lays the groundwork for promoting grassroots peace activism, which ultimately leads to the establishment of the peace organization, Artists for World Peace. Creating artistic designs such as the International Peace Belt, and establishing numerous other projects to raise funds on behalf of social justice and humanitarian endeavors, Artists for World Peace remains one of the more distinguished, non‐governmental organizations for peace and justice; its impact has been felt far and wide. Devoid of political intrigues, it tells the story of how creative peacemaking can be effective in changing many peoples' lives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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15. Putting "Us" in Place: A Contrapuntal "Position" on Research Access in Over-Researched Contexts.
- Author
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Ward, Patricia
- Subjects
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HUMANITARIAN assistance , *RESEARCH personnel , *POWER (Social sciences) , *REFLEXIVITY , *SCHOLARLY method - Abstract
This article centers the labor aid workers perform to manage researchers in the humanitarian aid sector in Jordan. It examines how workers move and manage researchers' bodies (including the author's) as part of their daily job routines. Drawing from sociological and postcolonial scholarship on labor and the body to document the latter highlights multiple "knowledge producers" that shape and contest data collection in this context. The goal in describing this process is twofold. First, this article seeks to elaborate understandings of power relations in data collection processes, particularly in postcolonial settings considered over-researched. Second, it aims to broaden the scope and utility of analytic reflexivity through contrapuntal thinking about researchers' positions in the research process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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16. Machine learning-enhanced evaluation of food security across 169 economies.
- Author
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Xiong, Ruoyu, Peng, Huan, Chen, Xi, and Shuai, Chenyang
- Subjects
MACHINE learning ,HUMANITARIAN assistance ,FOOD security ,MISSING data (Statistics) ,FOOD chemistry - Abstract
The assessment of global food security is imperative for sustainable development worldwide. However, limited data availability has impeded a comprehensive evaluation on a global scale. This study addresses this challenge by conducting a thorough food security analysis spanning 169 countries from 2008 to 2020. To overcome data limitations, an imputed database is generated using four machine learning models to estimate missing data. The results uncover significant disparities in food security across regions. Europe, Oceania, and North America exhibit higher levels, while East Asia and South America fall in the middle, and Africa and South Asia experience lower levels. Notably, six African countries have made considerable progress in food security, potentially attributed to support from nations such as France, the United States, China, and Japan. Policy recommendations include humanitarian relief, expanding social safety nets, developing transportation networks, supplying fertilizers in vulnerable areas, and stabilizing food prices through national fiscal policies are also proposed for economies with low food security performance. The study provides an imputed database for 44 indicators from 2008 to 2020, offering insights into food security and potential solutions for governments and international organizations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Distributed Ledger-Based Authentication and Authorization of IoT Devices in Federated Environments.
- Author
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Jarosz, Michał, Wrona, Konrad, and Zieliński, Zbigniew
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POLICY discourse ,HUMANITARIAN assistance ,DISASTER relief ,PHYSICAL mobility ,INTERNET of things - Abstract
One of the main security challenges when federating separate Internet of Things (IoT) administrative domains is effective Identity and Access Management, which is required to establish trust and secure communication between federated IoT devices. The primary goal of the work is to develop a "lightweight" protocol to enable authentication and authorization of IoT devices in federated environments and ensure the secure communication of IoT devices. We propose a novel Lightweight Authentication and Authorization Framework for Federated IoT (LAAFFI) which takes advantage of the unique fingerprint of IoT devices based on their configuration and additional hardware modules, such as Physical Unclonable Function, to provide flexible authentication and authorization based on Distributed Ledger technology. Moreover, LAAFFI supports IoT devices with limited computing resources and devices not equipped with secure storage space. We implemented a prototype of LAAFFI and evaluated its performance in the Hyperledger Fabric-based IoT framework. Three main metrics were evaluated: latency, throughput (number of operations or transactions per second), and network resource utilization rate (transmission overhead introduced by the LAAFFI protocol). The performance tests conducted confirmed the high efficiency and suitability of the protocol for federated IoT environments. Also, all LAAFFI components are scalable as confirmed by tests. We formally evaluated LAAFFI security using Verifpal as a formal verification tool. Based on the models developed for Verifpal, we validated their security properties, such as message secrecy, authenticity, and freshness. Our results show that the proposed solution can improve the security of federated IoT environments while providing zero-day interoperability and high scalability. Compared to existing solutions, LAAFFI is more efficient due to the use of symmetric cryptography and algorithms adapted for operations involving IoT devices. LAAFFI supports multiple authorization mechanisms, and since it also offers authentication and accountability, it meets the requirements of Authentication, Authorization and Accounting (AAA). It uses Distributed Ledger (DL) and smart contracts to ensure that the request complies with the policies agreed between the organizations. LAAFFI offers authentication of devices belonging to a single organization and different organizations, with the assurance that the encryption key will be shared with another device only if the appropriate security policy is met. The proposed protocol is particularly useful for ensuring the security of federated IoT environments created ad hoc for special missions, e.g., operations conducted by NATO countries and disaster relief operations Humanitarian Assistance and Disaster Relief (HADR) involving military forces and civilian services, where immediate interoperability is required. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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18. İsrail-Filistin Savaşında Siyasi Liderlerin X (Twitter) İçeriklerinin Analizi.
- Author
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Koca, Gözde, Eğilmez, Özüm, and Ankara, Yeşim
- Subjects
PRESIDENTS of the United States ,ARAB-Israeli conflict ,HUMANITARIAN assistance ,POLITICAL attitudes ,POLITICIANS - Abstract
Copyright of Itobiad: Journal of the Human & Social Science Researches / İnsan ve Toplum Bilimleri Araştırmaları Dergisi is the property of Itobiad: Journal of the Human & Social Science Researches and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Study of the Gendered Impacts of Climate Change in Bol, Lake Province, Chad.
- Author
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Djako, Exaucé Gali, Mendy, Evelyne, Ngaryamgaye, Semingar, Klassou, Komi Sélom, and Chenal, Jérôme
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CLIMATE change adaptation ,HUMANITARIAN assistance ,CLIMATE change ,COST of living ,SOCIAL systems - Abstract
Climate change is a global phenomenon impacting ecosystems, economies, and livelihoods. This research carried out in Bol in the Lake Province of Chad, a region heavily affected by climate change, aims to analyze the gender-differentiated impacts of this phenomenon. It was carried out using the rapid analysis and participatory planning (RAPP) method and structural analysis for social systems (SAS2). Meteorological and socioeconomic data were collected through interviews, household surveys, and focus groups. The results indicate variability in rainfall, with a slight downward trend and an increase in temperature. The women identified an increase in the cost of living, human and material losses, warmer housing, and health problems as socioeconomic socioeconomic consequences of climate change. Their coping strategies include community self-help, humanitarian aid, and welfare activities. Obstacles to full participation in the search for solutions include access to education, low decision-making power, and political representation. This research enriches our understanding of the interactions between gender, climate change, adaptation, and inclusive policy importance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. The right to the city for urban refugees? Living in the shadow of the camp in Nairobi, Amman and Addis Ababa.
- Author
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Earle, Lucy
- Subjects
FORCED migration ,HUMANITARIAN assistance ,REFUGEE camps ,CITIES & towns ,URBAN life - Abstract
This paper investigates the multiple ways in which the lives of urban refugees are impacted by the presence of refugee camps. It builds on a growing body of literature on the urban refugee experience that recognizes the agency exercised in the rejection of the camp. But it also demonstrates how, in countries with an encampment policy, the presence of camps can limit urban refugees' mobility and their ability to take advantage of all that urban life has to offer. It also highlights the consequences of the choice refugees must make between receiving humanitarian aid in a camp and living unassisted in an urban area. The paper draws on qualitative interviews with refugees in Ethiopia, Kenya and Jordan. It presents conclusions on the inadequacy of the international response, which fails to capitalize on the presence of displaced people in cities, to achieve the supposed policy goal of "self-reliance". [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Supporting disaster relief operations through RFID: enabling visibility and coordination.
- Author
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Wagner, Stephan M., Ramkumar, M., Kumar, Gopal, and Schoenherr, Tobias
- Subjects
RADIO frequency identification systems ,EMERGENCY management ,HUMANITARIAN assistance ,SUPPLY chain management ,SOCIAL impact ,DISASTER relief - Abstract
Purpose: In the aftermath of disasters, humanitarian actors need to coordinate their activities based on accurate information about the disaster site, its surrounding environment, the victims and survivors and the supply of and demand for relief supplies. In this study, the authors examine the characteristics of radio frequency identification (RFID) technology and those of disaster relief operations to achieve information visibility and actor coordination for effective and efficient humanitarian relief operations. Design/methodology/approach: Building on the contingent resource-based view (CRBV), the authors present a model of task-technology fit (TTF) that explains how the use of RFID can improve visibility and coordination. Survey data were collected from humanitarian practitioners in India, and partial least squares (PLS) analysis was used to analyze the model. Findings: The characteristics of both RFID technology and disaster relief operations significantly influence TTF, and TTF predicts RFID usage in disaster relief operations, providing visibility and coordination. TTF is also a mediator between the characteristics of RFID technology and disaster relief operations and between visibility and coordination. Social implications: The many recent humanitarian disasters have demonstrated the critical importance of effective and efficient humanitarian supply chain and logistics strategies and operations in assisting disaster-affected populations. The active and appropriate use of technology, including RFID, can help make disaster response more effective and efficient. Originality/value: Humanitarian actors value RFID technology because of its ability to improve the visibility and coordination of relief operations. This study brings a new perspective to the benefits of RFID technology and sheds light on its antecedents. The study thus expands the understanding of technology in humanitarian operations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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22. Humanitarianism as a tool of statecraft: contested authority, sovereign violence, and humanity in the Syrian civil war.
- Author
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Seven, Ümit
- Subjects
- *
SYRIAN Civil War, 2011- , *HUMANITARIAN assistance , *CIVIL war , *POWER (Social sciences) , *SOVEREIGNTY - Abstract
This research explores the dynamics of interaction between the sovereign state and international humanitarian organisations in alleviating human suffering in the Syrian civil war. Considering civil wars as a rupture in sovereignty, its focus is on the practices of the sovereign state within its social context and the resulting implications for aid organisations. I argue that the Syrian regime has employed state violence, in tandem with administrative and bureaucratic impediments, to reassert its sovereign authority in humanitarian decision‐making processes. This exercise of sovereign power is intertwined with the actions of aid organisations, thereby reshaping power dynamics among the state, aid organisations, and vulnerable populations. Through a qualitative method, I show that the deployment of state violence concomitantly pushes aid organisations, specifically the United Nations, towards enforcing the state sovereignty defined by the regime. As an effect of assertive sovereignty, interpretations of humanitarian principles and practices are continuously negotiated and constructed differently by aid organisations, even though they share a common overarching goal. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Is in-kind kinder than cash? The impact of money vs. food aid on social emotions and aid take-up.
- Author
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Kassirer, Samantha, Jami, Ata, and Kouchaki, Maryam
- Subjects
- *
HUMANITARIAN assistance , *GOVERNMENT aid , *FIELD research , *FOOD security , *MODEL theory - Abstract
Over the past decade, there has been a shift in the way charities deliver humanitarian aid. Historically, the most prevalent way to help the global poor was by providing in-kind asset transfers. Recently, alternatives to in-kind aid, such as cash aid, have been increasing in prevalence. Although there has been widespread endorsement from the academic community and the public on the popularizing model of giving cash aid, one perspective remains untouched: the recipient's perspective. Thus, the present research explores how food-insecure individuals feel when receiving money vs. in-kind food aid to help meet their hunger and nutrition needs. Specifically, we explore the degree of positive (e.g., feeling cared for) and negative (e.g., feeling ashamed) social emotions felt when receiving the aid opportunity and how willing recipients are to accept monetary (vs. food) aid. Results from five preregistered experiments (N = 3,110)--a field experiment in Kenya and four online experiments in the United States--find that monetary (vs. food) aid elicits comparatively more of a market-pricing relationship and less of a communal sharing relationship and, hence, makes people feel less positive and more negative social emotions when receiving the help. Subsequently, recipients are less likely to take up monetary (vs. food) aid from a charity. However, we find that this effect does not persist when receiving government aid: Recipients are similarly willing to accept money and in-kind food aid from the government. This research suggests that future scholarship ought to examine ways to improve psychological experiences when receiving money from charity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. "الحماية القانونية لألطفال أثناء الن ازعات المسلحة في المواثيق الدولية والنظام السعودي"
- Subjects
CHILD welfare ,PUBLIC welfare ,HUMANITARIAN assistance ,INTERNATIONAL cooperation ,REGIONALISM (International organization) - Abstract
Copyright of Arab Journal for Scientific Publishing is the property of Research & Development of Human Recourses Center (REMAH) and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
25. Motivations Behind Donor Funding Refusal: Towards a Typology of Principled Refusal.
- Author
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Cochrane, Logan and Wilson, Alexandra
- Subjects
- *
INTERNATIONAL economic assistance , *NONGOVERNMENTAL organizations , *DATABASES , *HUMANITARIAN assistance , *FAIRNESS - Abstract
AbstractNGOs are perceived as organisations that are always seeking funding. However, there are many instances where donations are refused by NGOs. This counter-intuitive decision, given the often grave humanitarian needs, is not well documented beyond brief references or individual cases. Refusal is an expression of values and principles, important for actors that are often portrayed as having little to no agency or power in relation to donors. We developed a database of 32 examples of funding refusals by NGOs detailing the reasons for refusal. To classify and compare the refusals, we developed a preliminary typology of NGO motivations for donor refusal, which contains four types (independence, impartiality, neutrality, and humanity) that align with humanitarian principles. Each category and type are defined and examples of each are provided. Given the focal nature of NGOs in development activity, the lack of attention to funding refusal is notable. We address this lacuna by creating a database and developing a preliminary typology to provide a foundation for future research. This study contributes a novel typology to an under-studied topic. In so doing, this paper provides a foundation for studies of refusal to follow. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Australian foreign policy, the media and responses to mass atrocities.
- Author
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Mayroz, Eyal
- Subjects
- *
GENOCIDE prevention , *HUMANITARIAN assistance , *INTERNATIONAL relations , *INTERNATIONAL cooperation , *MASS media policy , *PUBLIC opinion , *ORGANIZATIONAL citizenship behavior , *ATROCITIES , *GENOCIDE - Abstract
This paper begins to put together a thus-far missing picture of the dynamics between Australian public opinion, media and foreign policy responses to genocide and other mass atrocities, in the Asia-Pacific and further afield. It examines key factors likely to influence these relationships, focusing on the role and significance of normative-ideational imperatives, such as Australian values and notions of ‘good international citizenship’ in Australia's foreign policymaking. To assess the centrality of these imperatives for the public and their implications for foreign policy, an exploratory study is conducted of Australian mainstream media's coverage of the Rohingya crisis in Myanmar during 2016–2017. The findings point to striking normative omissions in the media's coverage and public and official deliberations over Australia's policy responses to the crisis. The essay discusses potential explanations for these omissions and highlights themes for further research arising from the study. These relate to the influence of political party bipartisanship on Australia's foreign policies, the importance of middle powers cooperation for international atrocity prevention, and the extent to which a focus on refugee intake and humanitarian aid might have substituted for discussions of more direct ways Australia could assist in halting the violence itself. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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27. RECONSTRUCTING YEMEN: LONG-TERM AND WAR-RELATED CONSTRAINTS TO SOCIO-ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT.
- Author
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Lackner, Helen
- Subjects
- *
POSTWAR reconstruction , *HUMANITARIAN assistance , *WATER shortages , *CLIMATE change , *INFRASTRUCTURE (Economics) - Abstract
Many of the proposals for post-war reconstruction of Yemen are founded upon idealistic and unrealistic visions of the state of the country. This article, by contrast, focuses on the multiple and complex problems which will have to be faced once Yemen returns to a semblance of recognisable governance. It lists the different types of constraints which will have to be addressed, both intrinsic and international. Internally, there are both long-standing factors which are unrelated to the war situation and others which are largely war-related. Externally there are factors which depend on the country's international partners, such as the states of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) and multilateral and international financial institutions. In the first category, water scarcity and other climate change factors are the most fundamental, followed by demographic issues including social infrastructure, the age pyramid and the overall discrepancy between the growing size of the population and the available natural resources. War – related constraints are primarily of two kinds: the deep and serious fragmentation of the country, and the socio-economic impact of years of dependence on humanitarian aid. Equally important, are the development strategies imposed by the external financiers and the likelihood that the available financing will be well below both need and expectation. Throughout, the article briefly outlines suggestions to address these constraints, insofar as this can be done in ignorance of the outcome of the war. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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28. Time and Power in Azraq Refugee Camp: A Nine-to-Five Emergency. By Melissa Gatter.
- Author
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Ghanem, Hala
- Subjects
- *
EUROPEAN Migrant Crisis, 2015-2016 , *REFUGEE camps , *FORCED migration , *HUMANITARIAN assistance , *HUMANITARIANISM ,REPRODUCTIVE isolation - Abstract
This article discusses the book "Time and Power in Azraq Refugee Camp: A Nine-to-Five Emergency" by Melissa Gatter. The book explores the concept of temporal displacement in refugee camps, specifically focusing on the Azraq camp in Jordan. It challenges the conventional narratives about refugee camps by examining the role of time in shaping daily life and power dynamics within the camp. The book provides a nuanced understanding of the experiences of both aid workers and camp residents, highlighting the complexities and challenges they face. It also calls for further research into the timelines and permanence of refugee camps and advocates for reevaluating their temporary status. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2024
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29. Monitoring North Korea: a visual autoethnography of humanitarian-aid practices.
- Author
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Shim, David
- Subjects
- *
HUMANITARIAN assistance , *FOOD relief , *AUTOETHNOGRAPHY - Abstract
In this visual essay, I draw on my own photographs taken as a so-called food-aid monitor working in the Democratic People's Republic of Korea for the United Nations World Food Programme. I provide an autoethnographic account to allow consideration of the visual dimension of humanitarian aid: everyday observations, field visits and snapshots inform humanitarian action. I intend to shed a different light on the inherent visual politics of this aid practice and, hence, build a different kind of knowledge concerning (aid assistance in) the country. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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30. Erasing Our Humanity: Crisis, Social Emotional Learning, and Generational Fractures in the Nduta Refugee Camp.
- Author
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Dalrymple, Kelsey A.
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL emotional learning , *INTERGENERATIONAL relations , *REFUGEE camps , *HUMANITARIAN intervention , *HUMANITARIAN assistance , *HUMANITARIANISM - Abstract
Ample scholarship thoroughly documents how modern humanitarian aid enacts legacies of colonialism and processes of Westernization through the imposition of foreign values and promotion of 'universal' norms. Extensive research has also explored processes of socio-cultural-moral transformation due to crisis and displacement. This paper extends this work by demonstrating an explicit connection between the two. Drawing on 10 months of ethnographic research that examined how Burundian refugees in Tanzania experience humanitarian social emotional learning (SEL), findings reveal various intersecting lines of crisis in the Nduta refugee camp. This research illuminates how SEL interacts with these lines of crisis to exacerbate intergenerational tensions. The self-centric values promoted through SEL and the pedagogies it employs conflict with the collectivist ethos of the Nduta community, thus breaking the Burundian generational contract of reciprocity, solidarity, and moral responsibility. In this context, SEL operates on conflicting narratives of crisis that clash with generational hopes for the prevention of future crisis in Burundi. These generational fractures are resulting in fears across the Nduta community that the decline of traditional Burundian values and communitarian ethos will not only perpetuate intergenerational experiences of crisis but has also initiated the perceived erasure of their culture and the essence of their humanity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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31. Black Lives in Limbo: Liberian Refugees, Migrant Justice, and the Narration of Antiblack U.S. Border Politics.
- Author
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Kiazolu, Yatta
- Subjects
- *
PEOPLE of color , *SOCIAL justice , *RACISM , *HUMANITARIAN assistance , *SOCIAL marginality - Abstract
The Trump administration's attacks on immigrant communities, especially undocumented people, produced major policy reversals on temporary humanitarian relief programs, such as the termination of Deferred Enforced Departure (DED). While these policies have had wide-reaching impacts across communities of color, within the broader immigration debate, the experiences of Black migrants have often been overlooked. This paper asks the following questions: How did extremist policies impact Black migrants under the Trump administration? What vulnerabilities did these policies produce or exacerbate? What do these efforts tell us about the "turn" toward authoritarianism in U.S. politics? Applying antiblackness as a theoretical framework, this paper conducts a content analysis of media outlets to examine the impact of extremist policies on Liberian DED beneficiaries. The ramifications of these policies intensified pre-existing antiblack dynamics of belonging and exclusion within the state by reinforcing racial hierarchies, producing social exclusion and vulnerability to state violence, and maintaining constrained access to citizenship. In assessing the many ways that antiblack racism manifests for citizens and non-citizens alike, we can extend our understanding of migrant justice, racial justice, and anti-imperialism as interdependent struggles in the face of rising authoritarianism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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32. Landslide Recognition Based on Machine Learning Considering Terrain Feature Fusion.
- Author
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Wang, Jincan, Wang, Zhiheng, Peng, Liyao, and Qian, Chenzhihao
- Subjects
- *
CONVOLUTIONAL neural networks , *REMOTE sensing , *MACHINE learning , *HUMANITARIAN assistance , *REMOTE-sensing images - Abstract
Landslides are one of the major disasters that exist worldwide, posing a serious threat to human life and property safety. Rapid and accurate detection and mapping of landslides are crucial for risk assessment and humanitarian assistance in affected areas. To achieve this goal, this study proposes a landslide recognition method based on machine learning (ML) and terrain feature fusion. Taking the Dawan River Basin in Detuo Township and Tianwan Yi Ethnic Township as the research area, firstly, landslide-related data were compiled, including a landslide inventory based on field surveys, satellite images, historical data, high-resolution remote sensing images, and terrain data. Then, different training datasets for landslide recognition are constructed, including full feature datasets that fusion terrain features and remote sensing features and datasets that only contain remote sensing features. At the same time, different ratios of landslide to non-landslide (or positive/negative, P/N) samples are set in the training data. Subsequently, five ML algorithms, including Extreme Gradient Boost (XGBoost), Adaptive Boost (AdaBoost), Light Gradient Boost (LightGBM), Random Forest (RF), and Convolutional Neural Network (CNN), were used to train each training dataset, and landslide recognition was performed on the validation area. Finally, accuracy (A), precision (P), recall (R), F1 score (F1), and intersection over union (IOU) were selected to evaluate the landslide recognition ability of different models. The research results indicate that selecting ML models suitable for the study area and the ratio of the P/N samples can improve the A, R, F1, and IOU of landslide identification results, resulting in more accurate and reasonable landslide identification results; Fusion terrain features can make the model recognize landslides more comprehensively and align better with the actual conditions. The best-performing model in the study is LightGBM. When the input data includes all features and the P/N sample ratio is optimal, the A, P, R, F1, and IOU of landslide recognition results for this model are 97.47%, 85.40%, 76.95%, 80.95%, and 71.28%, respectively. Compared to the landslide recognition results using only remote sensing features, this model shows improvements of 4.51%, 35.66%, 5.41%, 22.27%, and 29.16% in A, P, R, F1, and IOU, respectively. This study serves as a valuable reference for the precise and comprehensive identification of landslide areas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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33. Calendar versus Analysis Time: Reanalyzing the Relationship between Humanitarian Aid and Civil Conflict Duration.
- Author
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Metzger, Shawna K
- Subjects
- *
HUMANITARIAN assistance , *CALENDAR , *HYPOTHESIS - Abstract
Previous work in International Studies Quarterly shows higher levels of humanitarian aid prolong civil conflicts. It also finds, among conflict–years in which aid is received, that this conflict-prolonging effect is more acute in insurgency-based civil conflicts, albeit with weaker supporting evidence. However, I show this work accidentally generated its conflict duration variable incorrectly, with the duration measuring time since January 1, 1960, not time since civil conflict onset. The duration values also exclude the first at-risk day for the first observation in each conflict, which drops true one-day durations from the estimation sample. I rerun the original analysis with the corrected duration coding and find evidence that supports the opposite of the author's main hypothesis: higher levels of humanitarian aid either have no effect on or shorten civil conflict duration. Additionally, the weak evidence for the author's second hypothesis mostly disappears, depending on the conflict's duration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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34. The composition of UN peacekeeping operations and aid worker security.
- Author
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Levin, Andrew
- Subjects
- *
HUMANITARIAN assistance , *RESEARCH personnel , *DATA analysis , *STATISTICS ,UNITED Nations peacekeeping forces - Abstract
Do United Nations peacekeeping operations improve the security of humanitarian aid workers during conflict? Answering this question is important given the critical assistance that humanitarian personnel provide in conflict zones, the increased integration of humanitarian activities in UN operations in recent decades and the growing incidence of attacks against aid workers worldwide. Researchers have found that the presence of peacekeepers does not positively affect aid worker security and may even make humanitarian personnel more vulnerable to violent attacks. However, previous studies have not examined whether the effect of peacekeeping operations on aid worker security is influenced by the personnel composition of UN missions. I hypothesize that operations with more troops are likely to reduce attacks against aid workers, while similar security gains are unlikely to be realized with larger numbers of police or observers. This is due to troops' specific capabilities, which increase their ability to mitigate high-intensity conflict environments and protect humanitarian personnel traveling on roads. Statistical analyses of monthly data between 2000 and 2015 indicate that greater numbers of UN troops, but not police and observers, are correlated with fewer attacks against aid workers. The implications of these findings are discussed, with an eye toward addressing challenges facing the UN's force-generation process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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35. Rebuilding Mosul: Public opinion on foreign-led heritage reconstruction.
- Author
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Isakhan, Benjamin and Meskell, Lynn
- Subjects
- *
HISTORIC sites , *HUMANITARIAN assistance , *PUBLIC opinion , *PEACE , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) - Abstract
Following the devastation of the northern Iraqi city of Mosul by the Islamic State, various foreign actors launched initiatives to reconstruct the heritage sites of the city. However, such efforts are underpinned by assumptions about how local people value their heritage, how they perceive its destruction, whether they view reconstruction as a priority and the extent to which they support foreign-led efforts to rebuild their heritage. This article holds these assumptions up to empirical scrutiny via an original survey of 1600 Mosul residents and their attitudes towards heritage. The results hold four key implications for current and future heritage projects in Mosul, namely that while residents want to see heritage sites reconstructed, they prefer that heritage reconstruction not be privileged over humanitarian aid, development and peace building; includes the rebuilding of their local religious sites as much as iconic and/or non-religious sites and transforms sites into new and more useful structures to the community, and while they acknowledge the work of foreign actors, they want agency and control over the future of their heritage. The article concludes by noting that such findings hold important implications for future foreign-led heritage projects in (post-)conflict environments where mass human suffering and heritage destruction has taken place. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
- Full Text
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36. Maxillofacial Surgery in Ukraine During a War: Challenges and Perspectives—A National Survey.
- Author
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Palyvoda, Roman, Olexandr, Kaniura, Yan, Vares, Igor, Fedirko, Myron, Uhryn, Yurii, Chepurnyi, Johanna, Snäll, Alla, Shepelja, Andrii, Kopchak, and Danilo, Kalashnikov
- Subjects
- *
RUSSIAN invasion of Ukraine, 2022- , *WOUND care , *MILITARY hospitals , *WAR , *BLAST injuries , *MAXILLOFACIAL surgery ,RUSSIAN armed forces - Abstract
Introduction The invasion of Ukraine by Russian troops on February 24, 2022, and the beginning of the full-scale war had huge humanitarian consequences. The major challenges facing the Ukrainian health care system included the disruption of medical infrastructure and logistics, the termination of the supply of expendable materials, significant migration, and a dramatic increase in high-velocity blast and gunshot injuries among combatants and civilians. The aim of the present study was to analyze the challenges and solutions in patient care faced by the Ukrainian system of maxillofacial surgery during the war in different regions of the country. Materials and Methods A cross-sectional study was designed and implemented as an online survey to collect national data concerning maxillofacial surgeons' experiences and professional activities. The study was initiated and supported by Bogomolets National Medical University (Kyiv, Ukraine), the Ukrainian representative of AO CMF (Arbeitsgemeinschaft für Osteosynthesefragen Craniomaxillofacial Surgery) and the University of Helsinki (Finland). The questionnaire was developed by specialists in maxillofacial surgery and sociologists and contained 65 close-ended questions. Surgeons who had not worked in this specialty in inpatient departments of hospitals since at least the beginning of the full-scale war were excluded from the study. We received and analyzed 97 responses that met the abovementioned criteria. The geography of respondents covered all the regions and the main cities of Ukraine, expect for the occupied territories. Results After a year of warfare, the percentage of surgeons who treated patients with blast and gunshot injuries increased from 43.4% to 86.6%. This percentage was higher in military hospitals and in regions located in the vicinity of the front line. We found that, during the war, 78.6% of respondents performed osteosynthesis in cases of high-velocity multifragmented facial bone fractures (in such cases, 58.3% of them strictly followed AO CMF recommendations, while 41.7% performed the fixation based on available hardware, existing technical possibilities and their own preferences). We found that 70.2% of respondents had the opportunity to apply Computer-Aided Design/Computer-Aided Manufacture technology and patient-specific implants for the treatment of gunshot injuries, 38.1% reported that their hospitals were able to perform microsurgical reconstructions for facial defects, 79.4% of respondents reported that their departments received humanitarian aid and support from volunteer organizations (either Ukrainian or international), which significantly facilitated the treatment process. Conclusions According to this nationwide survey of Ukrainian maxillofacial surgeons during a year of the full-scale war, 86.6% of respondents were involved in the treatment of gunshot and ballistic injuries in civilians and combatants. The main problems reported by the respondents were (1) a lack of experience and knowledge related to the treatment of severe wounds, especially by secondary reconstruction, and (2) a deficit of resources (equipment, materials, and medications) under conditions of disrupted logistics and changes in the numbers and nosological distribution of patients. There were the opportunity to transfer the patients to European clinics (29.9%), online consultations (45.4%), collaboration with foreign surgeons who come to Ukraine asvolunteers (32%). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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- View/download PDF
37. Visually Framing Disasters: Humanitarian Aid Organizations' Use of Visuals on Social Media.
- Author
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Lee, Sun Young, Lim, JungKyu Rhys, and Shi, Duli
- Subjects
- *
HUMANITARIAN assistance , *DISASTER relief , *DISASTER victims , *SOCIAL media , *NATURAL disasters , *MICROBLOGS - Abstract
The present study seeks to systematically describe how humanitarian aid organizations use visuals in their natural disaster-related social media messages and to analyze their effects on social media engagement. Using Rodriguez and Dimitrova's (2011) four levels of visual framing, we performed a content analysis of 810 tweets from 38 aid organizations. The results showed that, overall, the organizations' visuals had an emphasis on victims and on disaster relief efforts. The most effective types of visual framing, however, were not those the aid organizations most commonly used. We discuss the theoretical and practical implications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Between aid and rights: Humanitarian international NGOs responding to the crisis of European refugee protection.
- Author
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Dany, Charlotte
- Subjects
EUROPEAN Migrant Crisis, 2015-2016 ,HUMANITARIAN assistance ,NONGOVERNMENTAL organizations ,RUSSIA-Ukraine Conflict, 2014- ,HUMAN migrations ,HUMANITARIANISM - Abstract
Copyright of Zeitschrift für Politikwissenschaft is the property of Springer Nature and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2024
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39. Health Challenges in Ethiopia: An Ordeal of Homelessness.
- Author
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Arerie, Yosen Melka, Simeon, Abiot, and Butterfield, Alice K.
- Subjects
HOMELESSNESS ,MENTAL illness ,HYGIENE ,LOW-income housing ,HOMELESS persons ,HYPERTENSION ,HUMANITARIAN assistance - Abstract
Living without adequate shelter is a major problem in and of itself. The creation of adequate housing is a structural issue that requires development actors and the government to prioritize and build low-income housing. If the shortage of low-income housing is solved, homelessness will end. However, while homelessness continues to exist, health issues are unavoidable and inherent in the problem. Consequently, addressing the health of homeless persons is important from both a relief and humanitarian perspective. This study describes homeless people's health challenges in Ethiopia. The exploratory design of this study utilizes in-depth interviews and focus group discussions with 34 homeless persons, key informant interviews with three government officials, and multiple rounds of participant observation. Tables show detailed responses as a way of identifying common themes from various data sources. Thematic data analysis shows that persons experiencing homelessness have pitiful hygiene and sanitation practices. They are affected by physical health challenges including diabetes, high blood pressure, epilepsy, respiratory diseases, stomach problems, HIV, skin infections, injury, and foot trauma. Homeless people are susceptible to mental health problems, including insomnia and sleeping disorders, depression, personality disorders, and schizophrenia. Understanding homeless health challenges can inform policymakers, humanitarian programs, and researchers to take action to abate the severity of health issues among the street homeless in Ethiopia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Disaster and gender: men's experiences during and after the earthquake.
- Author
-
Usta, Galip, Gunduz, Fatma, and Atalay, Ezgi
- Subjects
EMERGENCY management ,SEARCH & rescue operations ,HUMANITARIAN assistance ,EARTHQUAKES ,GENDER inequality ,GENDER role - Abstract
The aim of this study is to discover how men's first reflex behaviors during earthquakes and how their coping strategies were shaped after earthquakes in Türkiye. Phenomenological design, one of the qualitative research methods, was used in the research. The data of the research were collected through a semi-structured interview form between 25.04.2023 and 15.05.2023. The study was conducted with 12 people, based on data saturation. Interviews with the participants lasted between 30 and 75 min. Four themes were created within the scope of the study. Men participate in search and rescue operations, particularly those that require physical fortitude, and in the distribution of humanitarian aid, according to the research. In this process, men felt cold-blooded and strong. It has been observed that men take more risks and put themselves at risk due to socially burdened responsibilities and their masculine characteristics. In terms of disaster risk reduction objectives and actions, the findings obtained within the framework of the difficulties encountered by men during the earthquake, coping strategies, and the impact of gender roles can be evaluated. Therefore, it is thought that investigating gender roles in disasters is important in creating disaster management policies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Joint Logistics Over the Shore in Times of War: Lessons Learned from Gaza's Trident Pier.
- Author
-
HARAKE, M. F.
- Subjects
ARAB-Israeli conflict ,HUMANITARIAN assistance ,MILITARY supplies ,U.S. dollar ,PROJECT management - Abstract
The aim of this study is to examine the project management process of the U.S. military's floating pier that was intended to provide humanitarian assistance in the Gaza Strip during the ongoing Palestinian-Israeli conflict since October 2023. The purpose of this research is to present a summary of the project management procedure for an obscure military capability known as Joint Logistics Over-the-Shore (JLOTS), which transports soldiers, vehicles, and equipment worldwide for military and humanitarian operations. Moreover, it seeks to gain insight into how this process can offer options to enhance mission effectiveness and efficiency to support guaranteed mobility, freedom of movement, and delivery of assistance in volatile and inaccessible areas. Additionally, it seeks to clarify how a complex project costing 320 million U.S. dollars, with a twomonths lifespan, providing supplies equal to only a few days of aid, and now decommissioned before its intended completion, has become a representation of great project failure. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
42. Are humanitarian supply chains sustainable? A systematic review and future research themes.
- Author
-
Nawazish, Mohammed, Nandakumar, M.K., and Mateen, Arqum
- Subjects
LITERATURE reviews ,SUPPLY chain management ,HUMANITARIAN assistance ,STAKEHOLDER theory ,SUPPLY chains - Abstract
Purpose: To address the challenges encountered in disaster responses, optimize resource utilization, minimize environmental and social impact, and ensure transparency and accountability, it is essential to review humanitarian supply chains and incorporate sustainability considerations. Humanitarian organizations can enhance their ability to deliver timely and effective assistance to those in need by continuously improving supply chain practices. Consequently, this work explores the convergence of two fast-growing domains: sustainability and humanitarian supply chain management (HSCM). Design/methodology/approach: The authors conducted a systematic literature review of peer-reviewed articles to identify the prominent research trends and themes from the two domains' interactions. The extant literature is represented under the theory, context, characteristics, and research method (TCCM) framework. The authors have utilized a stakeholder theory perspective to identify coordination and collaboration among the various stakeholders. Findings: This study's review findings reveal five future research directions formulating this study's central themes: the role of environmental sustainability, coordination, and collaboration in building effective HSCs; the role of humanitarian aid for the responsive HSC; the influence of big data predictive analytics on the HSC performance; development and empirical validation of sustainable HSC performance framework; the role of HSC stakeholders in building effective and efficient HSCs. Originality/value: There is no existing academic literature review available on sustainable HSCM. This review fills this void by fostering discussion about sustainable humanitarian supply chains where the authors notably propose the TCCM framework in the context of sustainable HSCM, followed by a stakeholder network. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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- View/download PDF
43. South Pacific Nations’ Absorptive Capacity for Air-advising Missions.
- Author
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Bowes, Paul, Birzer, Cristian, Carroll, Jacinta, and Daria, Vincent
- Subjects
HUMANITARIAN assistance ,COLUMNS ,NATIONAL security ,AIR forces ,EDUCATIONAL attainment - Abstract
In recent years, South Pacific leaders have advocated a “zone of peace” for the region, with their national security forces focusing on civil security to protect exclusive economic zones, conduct outreach, perform aeromedical evacuations, and deliver humanitarian aid. However, protecting a vast archipelago requires air capabilities that can reach remote islands quickly and are protected against threats. Developing a sovereign air capability depends on the country’s aviation industry, which can be technically restrictive. This article examines the absorptive capacity of South Pacific nations to develop sovereign air capabilities to shape actionable air-advising plans. The analysis is framed around three pillars essential for building such capabilities: infrastructure, capability, and a sustainable indigenous workforce. While capabilities and infrastructure can be quickly established, maturing a skilled domestic workforce hinges on the strength of the educational foundation in recipient nations. Thus, the success of air-advising efforts depends on the recipient nations’ educational attainment levels. We analyze demographic data to quantify workforce capacity for establishing a sovereign air force. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
44. The Triple Nexus and the Future of Multilateral Governance: Rethinking Coordination between Humanitarian, Development and Peacebuilding Efforts.
- Author
-
Baroncelli, Eugenia and Irrera, Daniela
- Subjects
INTERNATIONAL cooperation ,HUMANITARIAN assistance ,PEACEBUILDING ,NONGOVERNMENTAL organizations ,PLURALISM - Abstract
The UN-orchestrated Triple Nexus – a multilateral endeavour to provide humanitarian-development-peace responses in fragile and conflict-affected contexts – embodies several features of the emerging trend towards governance through regime complexity. Praised for its multi-actorness inclusivity and cross-policy experimentalism, the Nexus approach has been criticised as an attempt to replicate top-down, neo-liberal templates to govern crises in the peripheries. We analyse the new evidence provided in this Special Issue, connecting it to the debate on the future of multilateral governance, against the decline of the Liberal International Order (LIO). Guarding against naïve expectations of the Nexus as a panacea to bridge cross-policy gaps and bring about inter-agency cooperation amidst increased geopolitical tensions, we discuss its potential to become a venue for an enlarged conversation among traditional and new players. While also compatible with pluralist scenarios, a progressive variety of the Nexus may well emerge in the UN context, between Western and Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) players. Their shared understandings of civil and political rights offer a promising avenue to advance some forward-looking Nexus components, supportive of individual and nature-based rights, to govern the increased complexity of the current multiplex order. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Military Expansion in Disaster Response and Its Implications for the Humanitarian-Development-Peace Nexus.
- Author
-
Tinti, Alessandro
- Subjects
MILITARY personnel ,NATURAL disasters ,HUMANITARIAN assistance ,MILITARISM ,CLIMATE change - Abstract
Disaster response is a pathway for incorporating climate change principles into the framework of the Humanitarian-Development-Peace (HDP) nexus. However, the growing military presence in relief operations poses ethical, operational and political challenges. Based on the literature on green militarism and civil-military relations, a critical examination of the military expansion in disaster response highlights its potential to compromise the humanitarian principles underpinning the Triple Nexus. Given the unease already sparked within humanitarian and development circles by the inclusion of the peace pillar due to its association with notions of hard security, the current trend in disaster response may risk inadvertently promoting militarised aid within HDP programming. Focusing on the Philippines as a case study, the analysis enriches scholarly and policy debates on the Triple Nexus from a previously unexplored perspective and aims to open new research trajectories for further exploration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Reshaping the Multilateral Aid Regime from the Global South? Alternative Perspectives on Humanitarianism, Development and Peacebuilding from Latin America and the Caribbean.
- Author
-
Deciancio, Melisa, Garino, Agustina, and Moret, Delfina Vila
- Subjects
HUMANITARIAN assistance ,PEACEBUILDING ,INTERNATIONAL cooperation ,CONFLICT management - Abstract
In the context of rising contestations to the Liberal International Order (LIO), it is crucial to highlight the contribution of the Latin American and Caribbean (LAC) region to international institutions and global governance, particularly considering its peripheral position in the world order. The Triple Nexus Approach (TPA), adopted in 2016, promotes a coordinated effort in providing humanitarian assistance and aid for development by integrating them with peace endeavours. The LAC region has provided political and conceptual contributions to each TPA component, providing alternative perspectives on multilateral governance in humanitarian action, development and peacebuilding, emphasising the pursuit of collective and context-specific outcomes for crisis prevention. Focusing on the period from the early 21st century to 2019, a time when the Triple Nexus theoretical structuring publications emerged, it is highlighted how contestations to the LIO and the changing world order have impacted global governance norms, creating opportunities for emerging and peripheral countries to shape post-liberal rules. This allows Global South countries to set self-determined development objectives and make a meaningful contribution to global rule-making. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. HDP Nexus Outcomes and the Integration of Peace Elements: The Case of Iraq after the ISIL Conflict.
- Author
-
Siddiqui, Nadia and Guiu, Roger
- Subjects
HUMANITARIAN assistance ,PEACEBUILDING ,SOCIAL cohesion ,SOLIDARITY ,AUTHORITARIAN personality - Abstract
Although new policy frameworks such as the humanitarian-development-peace (HDP) nexus are emerging to better respond to increasingly complex and protracted conflicts and humanitarian crises, analysis of their impact remains limited. We analyse the case of Iraq in the aftermath of the ISIL conflict with data that measures the impact of interventions from across the nexus domains. Results show that humanitarian and development outcomes improved steadily over time, while peace outcomes remained poor and relatively unchanged. Improvement in the 'soft' security elements of peace related to social cohesion and coexistence were superseded by a deterioration in 'hard' security elements linked to protection of civilians and security configurations over time. These findings are explained by the lack of integration of hard security elements into an otherwise comprehensive international response along HDP Triple Nexus components. Separate hard security interventions rather had a critically different scope focused primarily on counterterrorism without further encompassing the wider range of security issues facing conflict-affected populations, including those internally displaced seeking to return, nor did they consider the diffusion of local powers and actors in this regard. This has left particularly vulnerable displaced and conflict-affected communities without remedy as priorities in the country shift. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Refugees as Entrepreneurs? A Challenge to HDP Programmes.
- Author
-
Nascimento, Daniela and Pureza, José Manuel
- Subjects
REFUGEES ,BUSINESSPEOPLE ,HUMANITARIAN assistance ,SYRIAN refugees - Abstract
Protracted refugee situations in territories of war or natural hazards challenge the logic of the humanitarian-development-peace (HDP) nexus that inspires liberal humanitarianism. The organised expression of that nexus is the so-called 'integrated approach' in which humanitarian aid, development aid and peacebuilding are intertwined in missions aimed at promoting a durable peace. The experiences of camps for Palestinian and Syrian refugees in Jordan and of South Sudanese and Congolese refugees in Uganda question some basic assumptions of the HDP programmes. In the last two decades, the policies adopted in these locations show a two-fold reconfiguration of the HDP liberal programme: first, the aim of containing humanitarian crises locally, in the peripheries, thereby preventing their adverse effects spreading to the core of the international system; second, a focus on refugees' capacity to become more resilient and entrepreneurial in order to overcome their vulnerable condition. Overall, this so-called neoliberal approach to humanitarianism with its focus on containment and individual entrepreneurship-inspired resilience has moved away from its liberal configuration as part of a systemic reconfiguration of local social fabric. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Polish Humanitarian Aid and Military Assistance to Ukraine Fighting Russia.
- Author
-
Bąk, Tomasz
- Subjects
HUMANITARIAN assistance ,MILITARY assistance ,RUSSIAN invasion of Ukraine, 2022- - Abstract
The article describes the aid Poland is providing to Ukraine fighting Russia. Our country has been providing both humanitarian and military assistance since the beginning of Russia's conflict with Ukraine, i.e. from 24 February 2022 up till now. Poland is a country that is at the forefront of contributing such help. Special attention should be paid to the involvement of Polish society, especially in the first days of the war, where they received Ukrainian refugees in their own homes sharing food and money with them. Military assistance, which has been continuously sent to the Ukrainian army for two years, plays an important role, and our Armed Forces are involved in the training of Ukrainian soldiers. Without international support, Russia's flag would have already been hoisted on the tallest buildings in Kiev, and someone appointed by Vladimir Putin would have taken the presidential seat in place of Volodymyr Zelenskyy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. TAKE THE REINS.
- Author
-
Campion, Joe and Pearson-Cougill, Simon
- Subjects
- *
ROTORCRAFT , *ATTACK helicopters , *ARCHIPELAGOES , *AIR bases , *HUMANITARIAN assistance - Published
- 2024
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