Management Final Rebeca
Management Final Rebeca
Required Reading:
Hanlon, J., H. Yanacopulos, ‘Introduction,’ pp. 7-16, in Yanacopulos and Hanlon, Civil War, Civil Peace.
In the introduction of Civil War, Civil Peace, Hanlon and Yanacopulos anchors the notion of this book is that outside
intervention can be peacebuilding, which is not simply rebuilding but working with local people at all levels to support change.
This work can never be more than ‘enabling’. It is also a book to discuss ‘civil wars’ and their roots and participants. H and Y
emphasize that since every war is different, peacebuilding need to be contextualized and try to keep a balance between
independence and gaining trust from the local. For the word ‘conflict’, this book offers an interesting insight, indicating that
conflicts are normal and nature in human society and it only goes wrong, which means, violent, when the social contract
breaks down or when there is a perceived group inequality. In this sense, the goal of international intervention is promoting a
just and stable peace by helping to end the war and creating the conditions that reduce the like hood of the war starting again
– which in the book refers as ‘work on war’, focus on war prevention and conflict management and resolution.
Hanlon, J. Chapter 1: ‘200 Wars and the Humanitarian Response,’ pp. 18-47, in Yanacopulos and Hanlon, Civil War, Civil Peace.
There were more than 200 wars in the end of 20th century, and most of them are civil war. The word ‘war’ thus has many
different definition, leading to the Humpy Dumpy problem of words being defined in arbitrary and contradictory ways. In the
book, Hanlon defines ‘war’ as ‘collective killing by collective purpose’; and civil war as ‘mainly within one country and where the
fighting is primarily between people of the country’. The word ‘conflict’ refers to any struggle between groups or individuals
over resources or power, it is an inevitable part of change and development. Peacebuilding is defined as ‘promoting a just and
stable peace by helping to end the war ad by helping to create the conditions that reduce the likehood of the war starting again.’
Humanitarian intervention starts with Red Cross, with the legal framework of Geneva conventions, was seemed as impartial,
neutral and independent. However, humanitarian work is nearly no longer seen as neutral in recent years, and hence it has
caused serious security problems for humanitarian workers. (e.g. kidnap and killing for Humanitarian workers) The other issue
is Nightingale’s risk, the danger that aid can do more harm than good, and might actually promote or prolong war. For example,
after the Rwanda genocide, the process of development and the international aid given to promote it interacted with the force
of exclusion, inequality, pauperization, racism, and oppression that laid the groundwork for the genocide, and benefited elites
instead of the poor. This issue led to the concept of ‘do no harm’ and a discussion of two kinds of ethics: absolute morality or
duty, where an individual feels duty bounded to provide help to the suffering. The other is utilitarian ethics that consider
immediate reduction of suffering may cause more suffering in the longer term.
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James, E. Managing Humanitarian Relief: An Operational Guide for NGOs, pp. 1-24.
The chapter ‘understanding emergencies and disaster-affected populations’ defines several terms:
An emergency is a situation where the members of population are suffering or threatened to a point that exceeds the local
capacity to respond or cope, and recover. It take on a humanitarian dimension when many lives are affected by hazards
(natural disasters or men-made hazard, which stem from a complex of underlying social factors) and immediate need are
alleviated.
A ‘crisis’ is a serious or dangerous event or series of events faced by an organization which requires significant resources to
resolve, such as economic collapse.
Humanitarian aims to save lives and reduce suffering in a short term. It focus on survival and it is different from political
and development. aid must be provided shortly, multiple tasks at once, relief takes place within a set of international law.
Conflict occurs where two or more patties perceive their needs, interests or concerns are threatened. It becomes a
humanitarian concern when violence threatens a population and leads to risks requiring outside intervention.
• Low intensity conflict: characterized by asymmetric and guerrilla warfare, insurgent and terrorist activity, and
violent revolution.
• high intensity conflict: involves social mobilization to field militaries that engage in conventional warfare
• modern conflict follows a pattern where civilians are the center of political and military objectives.
• ‘negative peace’: there is an absence of direct violence
• ‘positive peace’: absence of structure violence as well as the presence of sustainable peace.
Vulnerability has 3 factors: Proximity, exclusion, and marginalization. It also means lack of resilience.
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Formula: vulnerability x hazard = risk
Poverty is an inability to provide for essential needs, it encompasses a number of social dynamics such as reduced physical
status (poor health), lack of assets and powerlessness, as well as material insecurity. It is also a consequence of emergencies.
The actors in humanitarian work are NGOs and international organizations, research and academic institutions, donors of
various sorts, private voluntary and community-based organizations. The NGOs work in several ways: in grassroots level,
directly implement activities; INGOs facilitating community-based organizations (CBOs) and local NGOs (LNGOs); and multi-
sectoral programmes (multi-mandate).
Humanitarian principles
The key principles are humanity, impartiality, and independence. The author argue that neutrality presents more of a
dilemma, and independence can also be seen as controversial due to the source of fund.
Classical humanitarian: based on a deontological ethical position, arguing that there are universal moral obligations that
exist regardless of the circumstance.
Neo-humanitarianism (Wilsonian or maximalist): stresses humanity over neutrality, based on consequentialist ethics,
arguing that a positive outcome following a particular course of action determines if it is ethically correct. There is a ‘right
to intervene’.
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Solidarist approach: a clear partisanship with those being served. Their support may integrate an outspoken position about
humanitarian and political issues with their advocacy and assistance activists. They tend to assist particular groups or causes,
such as independence or rebel movement.
Initiatives:
• Code of conduct: maintain the high standards of independence, effectiveness and impact
• The sphere project: a multi-organizational effort that developed the Humanitarian Charter and Minimum Standards
in which organizations commit to quality and accountability.
• Inter-Agency Standing Committee (IASC): established in 1992 following a UN resolution designed to improve inter-
agency coordination. The IASC meets regularly to develop policy, divide responsibilities, identify gaps in
humanitarian response and advocate.
• Core humanitarian standard: provides a set of commitments, criteria, actions amd responsibilities to guide
humanitarian response.
• Compas Qualite: the quality approch takes into account different stakeholders and the relationships between them,
and issues such as short-term projects dealing with long term problems.
• Do no harm
Approaches:
• Participation: involving stakeholders, particularly beneficiaries, in planning, carrying out and evaluating a project or
programme. Traditionally marginalized groups such as women, children, and elderly’s view shall be included.
• Livelihoods and economic recovery: livehood are the capacities, resources and activities that generate an income.
o Tool: emergency marketing mapping analysis (EMMA)
o Not all emergencies are suitable to economic interventions
o Technology is playing an increased role
• Peace building
o Has to be added depends on the context
o Training and education is important
o Women and children are often targeted for such training to help break the cycle of violence from one
generation to the next
• Right-based approaches: for the human right beneficiary, emphasizing on the moral and legal rights of beneficiaries
through humanitarian principles and the analysis and addressing of root causes.
• Development relief:
basic operating features:
o Participation
o Accountability
o Decentralized control
o Demonstrating concern for sustaining livelihoods
o Basing strategies on the reality of disaster
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o Identifying the needs and capacities of diverse disaster survivors
o Building on survivors’ capacity
o Building on local institutions
o Setting sustanible standards for services
What is a “Complex Humanitarian Emergency” or a “Crisis”? Origin and evolution of the definitions.
Definitions
• Type of Conflict
o Before the end of the Cold War, conflicts were generally defined as Inter-state, of which the main actor as
professional armies, and with a strong respect on the principle of state Sovereignty.
o Now:
§ Intra-state
§ Unprecedented civil suffering 90 %
§ Elimination or Ethnic Cleansing
§ Many IDPs and refugees (1 out of 125)
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§ Brew of identity and economy & other causes (old roots);
§ Self-perpetuating political economy of war;
§ International community is overwhelmed & neglects & doesn’t know how to react & ambitious
interventionism;
§ Development processes totally disturbed, yet long-term rebuilding is necessary. This course takes
a l.t. perspective
§ More complex interventions: more NGOs, more tasks, more military action, more actors overall
• The distinctions between several concepts were broke down:
o War and Peace
o Identity, Ethnicity, and Religion
o State, Crime, Army, and Civilians
o Private and Public
o Natural vs man-made disasters
o Sovereignty of State (vs. Security of People)
o Security, Relief, Rehabilitation, and Development
o Complex Political Emergencies: what is political
o New distinctions? We ‘re thinking: no experts: your experience matters
o The role/absence of the states is an important theme in the background
• Types of Actors
o Local Population
o Refugees & IDPs
o Local, departmental, and national governments
o Warring factions (often thugs)
o Local NGOs
o International NGOs
o Bilateral Donors & Agencies
o ICRC & UN system
o Military
o Churches, Media, etc.
Compare to the past, there has been a proliferation of actors. Today, we can observe an incoherent ad-hoc
system of humanitarian organizations.
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• Conclusion
o No proper definition
o No proper conceptual distinctions
o Only an ad hoc inter-organizational system
o What about the internal management and humanitarian orgs in general?
o Next classes
o What do we know
o Internal and external interaction
o L.t. perspective
o Main issues, debates, information sources
Lecture 2
Monday, 07 October 2019, 10:00-11:30: “Humanitarian Mandates: Practical and Conceptual Problems”
1. Uncertainty on how and when to intervene (accompanied by a lack of preparedness).
2. The difficulties in linking relief, rehabilitation, and development.
3. Declining resources and disparities in allocation.
4. The roles and management of the organizations involved, in particular inter-organizational coordination and
competition, as well as tension between organizational control and local participation.
Required Reading:
Hanlon, J. Chapter 2: ‘Intervention,’ pp. 49-70, in Yanacopulos and Hanlon, Civil War, Civil Peace.
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this chapter looks at “the changing role of the intervener in the context of the changing nature of sovereignty and the increasing
importance of civil wars”. It stresses that most intervention is postwar peace support by agreement of the warring parties and
local people. In part, this is a recognition of national sovereignty, under which a state and its government have supreme
authority over their territory.
When the Cold War ended, the United Nations was given a much larger role in peacekeeping and peace support, responding to
the regulation of UN Charter (Art.1, Art.6,7,8). However, UN peacekeeping operations were mostly failed due to the reluctance
to distinguish victim from aggressor (Rwanda and Yugislavia), leading to the 2000 Brahimi Report calling for the UN to do more
to distinguish victim from aggressor and to protect civilians. This, in turn, led the UN to choose sides more actively
The concept of state sovereignty and whether interventions should be carried out without state consent was challenged. There
are 3 factors has led to this challenged:
1. The growth of civil war, that is to say, ‘domestic war’. A belief developed in a humanitarian tight to intervene in weak
states, independent of sovereignty.
2. The end of cold war: sovereignty meant that East and West would prevent the other side from intervening without an
invitation, leading to a tendency to support dictators and autocratic governments who would invite them in.
3. The debt crisis: Aid during the Cold War had often been in the form of loans, and in the 1980s Western lenders
presented the bill; the debt crisis gave lenders a new form
of leverage, just when the end of the Cold War meant developing countries had relatively less power.
Sovereignty was also increasingly breached, first by humanitarian agencies who want to help war victims even if they are not
invited, second by military interventions in support of humanitarian goals, and third by the international financial institutions
which, after the debt crisis and fall in aid of the 1980s, gained the power to impose conditions on previously sovereign
governments. Questions are raised about the appropriateness of these conditions in postwar countries.
Forcible humanitarian intervention was increasingly proposed as being necessary to save lives. This was opposed because it was
often arbitrary, politically motivated, and harmful. This, in turn, led to the proposal that instead of a right to intervene, there
should be a responsibility to protect. It argues that a right to intervene is 'unhelpful' because it focuses on the rights and claims
of the intervening state rather than the potential beneficiaries of the action. It also entailed a 'responsibility to prevent' and a
'responsibility to rebuild', and a criteria for military intervention:
1. Right authority
2. Just cause (large scale loss of life and large scale ethic cleaning prevetion)
3. Right intention
4. Last resort
5. Proportional means
6. Reasonable prospects
Harmer, A., Macrae, J. (eds)(2004) Beyond The Continuum: The Changing Role of Aid Policy in Protracted Crises, HPG Report
18, Humanitarian Policy Group, Overseas Development Institute, London, Chapter 1: “Beyond the Continuum: An Overview
of The Changing Role of Aid Policy in Protracted Crises” pp. 1-11. (See http://www.odi.org.uk/hpg/papers).
This introduction first defines 'protracted crisis’ as, ‘those environments in which a significant proportion of the population
is acutely vulnerable to death, disease and disruption of their livelihoods over a prolonged period of time.’
It first provides a brief background to the ‘first generation' of discussion on aid in protracted crises, which links to relief—
development 'continuun’. This concept addresses the good development aid would help to reduce communities'
vulnerability to the effects of natural hazards, providing Investment, (for example, for water conservation or flood control
measures). It will also enable populations to build up assets on which they could draw in the event of crisis; relief should be
seen not just as a palliative but also as a springboard for recovery, and the development of more resilient and more
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profitable livelihoods. In this sense, the continuum embodied the 'progressive' ethos of development. Under this framework,
new types of programmatic work and new approaches to engaging with local authorities, and participation and capacity-
building were developed and documented in codes of conduct.
'second generation’ provides a more convincing shared Framework for dialogue and closer working relations between the
humanitarian and development Community. A number of new factors emerged to shape the aid agenda in situations of
protracted crisis, and to inform a number of important innovations in the design of policy and programmes. These included:
- a changing focus from linking relief and development to linking aid and security (after 911)
- a concern among development aid actors to re-engage in countries potentially excluded from aid.
- a steady internationalization of responsibility for human security and welfare
- a growing convergence between the conceptual frameworks of the development and humanitarian arenas
and there are three core elements of the human security agenda:
examines the tactical and strategic differences that remain between the development and humanitarian communities.
• relief—development 'continuun’
o identify complementary objectives and strategies in relief and development aid.
o good development aid would help to reduce communities' vulnerability to the
effects of natural hazards, providing Investment, (for example, for water conservation or flood control
measures.)
o also enable populations to build up assets on which they could draw in the event of crisis.
o used sensibly, relief aid could protect assets and provide the basis for future development work.
• relief should be seen not just as a palliative but also as a springboard for recovery, and the development of more
resilient and more profitable livelihoods. In this sense, the continuum embodied the 'progressive' ethos of
development.
• the origins of conflict could be located in part in underdevelopment
• aid (particularly development aid) could be used to prevent conflict, by addressing grievances and reducing
economic instability
• 'continuum' model: crises, particularly conflict-related ones, were essentially transitory phenomena, short
interruptions to an otherwise progressive, state-led process of development. Historically, the development (and
relief) architecture had been designed to enable war-affected countries to restore their capacities to function as
states.
• The end of cold war: Experiences of 'post-conflict rehabilitation' were pivotal in debates regarding how to better
link relief-rehabilitation and development aid effort.
• Most of work around bringing developmental approaches into relief, was driven by multimandated UN agencies
and NGOs. Humanitarian budget lines were uncomfortably stretched to encompass more developmental
approaches in situations where donor governments, for political reasons, restricted funding to 'lifesaving' response.
• New types of programmatic work and new approaches to engaging with local authorities, and participation and
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capacity-building were developed and documented in codes of conduct.
• However, little progress was made. Reasons:
o this debate was driven largely by humanitarian policy actors, who remained relatively marginal on the
international aid stage. The debate was also acutely constrained by the bifurcated architecture of the aid
System.
o they had not kept pace with changes in the levels and types of vulnerability in protracted crises
o despite an apparent increase in emergency aid budgets, the volume of aid actually delivered in these
environments remained relatively low. . Overall, aid flows to 'poor performers' varied more widely over
time than with middle-income and low-income countries.
o Finally, the distinction between relief and development aid was not managerial, but political. Relief aid was
deployed in many protracted crises because donor governments wished to avoid engaging with states that
were perceived to be repressive or undemocratic, that were belligerents in active conflicts, or that were
subject to massive corruption.
• From the late 1990s, a number of new factors emerged to shape the aid agenda in situations of protracted crisis,
and to inform a number of important innovations in the design of policy and programmes. These included:
o a changing focus from linking relief and development to linking aid and security (after 911)
o a concern among development aid actors to re-engage in countries potentially excluded from aid.
o a steady internationalisation of responsibility for human security and welfare
o a growing convergence between the conceptual frameworks of the development and humanitarian arenas
• three core elements of the human security agenda:
o its concern with the security of people, rather than states
o international and multi-disciplinary effort
o the state remains the predominant vehicle for ensuring human security, but respect for sovereignty is
conditional, not absolute.
• an appeal to the potential links between migration, refugees and security has seen increasingly restrictive
international refugee policy, and the containment of large refugee movement
• In the aid arena more specifically, the objectives of aid have been focused on security. It identifies violent conflict
and widespread public insecurity and fear as one of the primary causes of poverty
• However, the allocation of such resources will be in line with the strategic priorities of donor countries, and these
do not necessarily correlate with relative levels of need.
• the idea of concentrating aid on countries that were performing 'well' was seen as a means of enhancing aid
effectiveness
• initiative is designed to encourage governments to deepen their commitment to pro-poor development and human
rights, and to tackle corruption in the management of public funds (including aid funds)
• they reflect a concern to maximize the effectiveness of aid by concentrating spending where it is most likely to
produce returns.
• However, it risks excluding those populations who are most vulnerable and in greatest need of support
• E.g.: In the case of the international financial institutions, there was also a recognition that excluding 'poorly
performing' and conflict-affected countries from partnerships with the World Bank.
• differences relate to the changing dimensions of second generation aid debates:
o Dep. Actors design the instruments to engage in 'poorly performing' countries seek to promote political
transformation.
o the 'poorly performing' countries agenda is not premised on the rapid resumption of a 'normal'
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development trajectory. Rather, what is at issue is how to sustain engagement in difficult environments,
possibly over long periods of time.
o the problem of 'poorly performing' countries is largely one of state formation and functioning. E.g. What
differentiates Tanzania, Mozambique and Ghana from Zimbabwe and Somalia is not their poor
development outcomes, but the behaviour and quality of their state institutions (or lack thereof).
o For international NGOs, engagement may not necessarily have been state-reliant, but it was dependent on
donor government support, and thus partner agencies developed responses that involved 'stretching'
humanitarian resources into more developmental strategies.
• how to shift from strategies that are state-avoiding (relief) towards more developmental strategies that rely on the
state as a partner?
• the idea of doing development in a context of authority crisis is inherently contradictory.
• Poverty Reduction Strategy Papers (PRSPs) :
• How aid actors manage the potential tensions between being both partners and critics of governments?
• Dilemma: On what basis, according to what principles and under whose authority, are decisions made about the
prioritisation of need and the allocation of resources? To whom are international decision-makers accountable?
• The release of new aid funds is often linked with peace processe
• the increase in the volume of aid can have a potentially significant impact on the political economies of these
countries, and on the relative power of different political groups and authorities.
• principles and Standards of humanitarian action are necessarily distinct from those of development
• Recent thinking within the development and humanitarian communities has shown increasing signs of convergence
around the concepts of social protection and welfare safety nets
• Economic growth and poverty eradication remain at the centre of the development agenda. humanitarian action:
to avoid and reduce excess morbidity and mortality
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***PPT & NOTES***
The World Humanitarian Submit has introduced the concept of ‘humanitarian eco-system’ to replace ‘humanitarian
system’.
• A STRATEGIC QUESTION
• HUM. ORGS HAVE A MANDATE OR A MISSION, WHICH FORMULATES THEIR MAIN GOALS AND ACTIVITIES
• ORIGINALLY, PUBLIC ORGS HAD A MANDATE AND PRIVATE ONES, INCLUDING NGOs, A MISSION. NOWADAYS, IT IS
TRENDY TO HAVE A MISSION.
• In order to have a mandate, there must be an emergency: WHEN IS IT AN EMERGENCY?
o CRUDE MORTALITY RATE (CMR) OF 1 DEATH PER 10,000 A DAY
o MALNUTRITION > 10%
o GENOCIDE
o -> IT IS AN EDUCATED GUESS.
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• SHOULD ONE HELP?
o “AM I MY BROTHER’S KEEPER?”
§ (common) HUMANITY -> how much pure humanitarian do we do?
§ HUMANITARIAN IMPULSE : reasoned intervention which is conscious of its consequence
§ HUMANITARIAN IMPERATIVE: intervene is necessity
o “RIPENESS” OF CONFLICT/HURTING STALEMATE
o DIFFERENT TRADITIONS & POWER POSITIONS
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§ Tradition: for e.g., Sweden and Norway have the tradition to help for peace
§ Power position: e.g. France usually intervene conflicts in Africa, which are its ex-colonies
• CONSEQUENCES OF HELP
there’s several problem of aid:
o TAKES AWAY DIGNITY (ESPECIALLY NON-RECIPROCAL HELP)
o CREATES DEPENDENCY
o REIGNITES CONFLICT
o NIGHTINGALE’S RISK
• DIFFERENCE INDIVIDUAL HELP & ORGANIZED AID
o AID DIFFERS FROM SOCIETAL LEVEL TO SOCIETAL LEVEL
• IF ONE HELPS: HOW MUCH? WHAT IS SUFFICIENT HELP?
o DEFINATION OF HA: BROAD OR NARROW?
§ Narrow: FOOD, WATER, SHELTER, MEDICINE OR MORE?
§ Broad: protection/ non-refoument
o Shall humanitarian action be a STOPGAP measure OR CONTAINMENT measure?
§ Containment measure: e.g. aid to turkey is also for the reason to stop Syrian refugees coming to
Europe – > aid can be politic, just to show ppl that they have done something
o NEW BEGINNING FOR THE NEEDY, I.E. LINKING RELIEF AND DEVELOPMENT
o REMAIN INDEPENDENT & NEUTRAL OR TAKE SIDES?
• WHAT IS THE LEGAL BASIS of intervention?
o THE SHIFT FROM SOVEREIGNTY TO SECURITY OF THE PEOPLE (e.g., R2P) , however, it IS INCOMPLETE
o The other base is SOLIDARITY (COMMON HUMANITY), that is also INCOMPLETE
• WHO INTERVENES:
o One actor is military, but there is a consequence of LEGAL ISSUES, such as USE OF FORCE
o SUPERPOWER, REGIONAL POWER, UN (e.g. UNHCR, UNICEF), ICRC and IFRC, NGOs
• CONCLUSION:
Interventions today are
§ MULTIPLICATION OF ACTORS (ACTOR MIX)
§ MANY ISSUES TO ADDRESS (ISSUE MIX)
§ DIFFERENT LEVELS OF SOCIETY (LEVEL MIX)
o BUT ALSO INCREASING INSTITUTIONALIZATION AND CODIFICATION OF HUMANITARIAN IDEALS (e.g., in
IHL, with the hum. principles and standards)
o MANDATE/MISSION AND STRATEGY ARE NECESSARY:
Having strategies is important so THE HUM. ORGs DO NOT HAVE TO ANSWER THESE QUESTIONS ON A
DAILY BASIS.
• STRATEGY FOR HUM. ORGs OFTEN MEANS SELECTING A SPECIALIZED AREA (FOOD OR HEALTH;
ETC) AND DETERMINING DIRECTION.
• PUT SIMPLY, IT IS ABOUT ANSWERING: WHERE ARE WE GOING & WHAT ARE WE DOING?
o SWOT Analysis : a simple tool to help formulating a strategy
§ An org. who wants to see how it will be in the future, should necessarily look at the environment
(opportunities and threats) and at itself (strengths and weakness)
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The difficulties in linking relief, rehabilitation, and development (LRRD)
o HUMANITARIANS MAINLY WORKED IN SAFE AREAS OUTSIDE OF CONFLICT ZONES, IN PARTICULAR IN
REFUGEE CAMPS
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• Today,
• HOWEVER, CHARACTERISTICS OF CONFLICT CHANGED:
o EXPLOSION OF THE NUMBER OF CONFLICTS, SOMETIMES REGIONAL
o INTRASTATE/CIVIL WARFARE (POLITY BREAKDOWN)
o IDENTITY BASED and/ or fight for economic CONTROL
o CIVILIANS AS TARGET
o RAGTAG ARMIES (MILITIAS, WARRING FACTIONS, CIVILIANS, etc.)
o ABUNDANCE OF LIGHT WEAPONS AND LANDMINES
o WEAK STATE WITH LOW LEGITIMACY: RESOURCE EXPLOITATION AND CRIMINALIZATION OF THE STATE
(e.g. demands, drugs )
o DISILLUSIONS WITH PEACEKEEPING (e.g. Somalia)
o INEFFECTIVENESS OF HUMANITARIAN AID
• FROM FIRST GENERATION TO SECOND GENERATION PEACEKEEPING: (PEACE/REBUILDING) WITH A SECURITY
COMPONENT)
peace keepers need to be among conflict parties because the conflict lines between them are not clear in these
complex emergencies, which are often intra-state conflicts.
o There are more chances that they are involved in the conflict.
o Humanitarians are in the middle of conflict parties as well
o The second generation peacekeeping there is a huge security component
o THREE TRANSITIONS (against social exclusion for societal integration)
§ SECURITY (from violence to peaceful CR)
§ GOVERNANCE (participatory democratization)
§ SOCIO-ECONOMIC (opportunities)
o -> MANY ISSUES COMPETE FOR ATTENTION!
• MULTIDIMENSIONAL OPERATIONS:
o RELIEF
o DEMILITARIZATION
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o POLITICAL (RE)CONSTRUCTION
o SOCIAL (RE)INTEGRATION & (RE)CONCILIATION
o ECONOMIC (RE)BUILDING
o PSYCHOLOGICAL: TRAUMA
o -> NO STATUS QUO EX ANTE, NO CONTINUUM
• DIFFERENT MIXES
• ILL-PREPARED, REFLECT OLD INSTITUTIONAL SET-UP (SECURITY COUNCIL, DEV. ORGs, etc.)
• STILL EVOLVING (FADING DISTINCTIONS)
INCREASING RESOURCES
• DECLINE IN
o ODA AFTER COLD WAR; BUT THIS HAS BEEN REVERSED SINCE 9/11
o UN DECLINE HAS BEEN REVERSED, IN PARTICULAR SINCE THE 2005 HUM. REFORM (WHICH INTRODUCED
THE CLUSTER REFORM)
• LESSER DECLINE NGOs, RELIEF
• DISPARITIES IN ALLOCATION
• YET, ALSO LACK OF ABSORPTIVE CAPACITY
• QUESTIONS:
• IS CUSTOM TAILORED AID POSSIBLE?
• OR DO DONORS JUST WANT CONTAINMENT? (double agenda)
• COMMON THEMES:
o NOT ENOUGH EMPIRICAL MATERIAL ON MANAGEMENT OF INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS
o WE CAN LEARN FROM THEIR MANAGEMENT: COMPLEX ENDS & MEANS RELATIONSHIP
o INTERESTING INTERACTION WITH OTHER DISCIPLINES AND MANAGEMENT AREAS
• NEED FOR INTER-ORGANIZATIONAL COOPERATION, BUT
o FUNDRAISING COMPETITION
o DIFFERENT PROCEDURES, PROMOTION POLICIES, ETC.
o WIDE VARIETY OF ORGANIZATIONS
• INTRA-ORGANIZATIONAL ISSUES
o DUAL ACCOUNTABILITY/ INTERMEDIARY ROLE
o DECENTRALIZATION
o LOCAL PARTICIPATION? WHO CONTROLS? WHOSE EFFECTIVENESS?
FIELD RESEARCH
• MORE POSITIVE ABOUT THE POSSIBILITIES FOR REBUILDING (IN GUATEMALA AND DR CONGO)
• LINKING RELIEF, REHABILITATION AND DEVELOPMENT
• Mandate/mission and strategy are necessary, so that hum. orgs do not have to answer the questions above on a
daily basis. Strategy for hum. Orgs OFTEN MEANS SELECTING A SPECIALIZED AREA (FOOD OR HEALTH, ETC) AND
DETERMINING THEIR OVERALL DIRECTION. Put simply, it is about answering: where are we going & what are we
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doing? In this sense, a mandate simplifies their organizational decision making. However, as crises are often
complex, always evolve, and humanitarian mandates focus on only one or a few sectors, humanitarian strategies
can rarely be followed perfectly and need to be updated every few years (normally 3-5 years)
• SWOT ANALYSIS IS THE SIMPLEST TOOL TO HELP FORMULATING A STRATEGY
Lecture 3
Required Reading:
Ballentine, K., and Sherman, J., “Introduction,” pp. 1-11, Cater, C., “The Political Economy of Conflict and UN Intervention:
Rethinking the Critical Cases of Africa,” pp. 19-42, in Ballentine, K., and Sherman, J. (eds.)(2003) The Political Economy of Armed
Conflict: Beyond Greed and Grievance, Lynne Rienner Publishers, Boulder.
Economic plays an important in conflicts. Obtaining a better control of resource and geography (for example, trading path) are
most likely the economic reason for war. Collier argues that greed and grievaty are the motives that make rebel. To understand
this, we can make a “stakeholder analysis” to see who is the key actor that is going to benefit from the conflict. However, this
hypothesis doesn’t explain the machanism of rebel economic. Moreover, its tendency of identifying a rebel group as a whole
has ignored the wide variety of rebellion individuals. Econonomic rationality can also hardly explain why some combatant fight
not for resource, but for ideology and belief.
Either this hypothesis has discussed the role of the state. Usually, the observation shows that weak and failing states, becasue
of their incomplete contral of territory and lack of functioning systems, has more risk to have conflicts.
In the other hand, the above theory was made mainly by the investigation in Africa, leaving the rest of the world unexplored.
The other regions, which have distinct history and cultural, may offer a better insight to this framework.
XXX
• This article look on the economic dimention of war, focusing on the self-financing nature of combatant activities in
intrastate wars
• difinition: "civil war economies" are distinguished by the militarization of economic life and the mobilization of
ecconomic assets and activity to finance the prosecution of war.
19
• Natural resources are a major source of the war revenue
• Scholars has identified several features unique to the economies of civil war:
o Parasitic. dominated by rent-seeking and the extraction and trade of primary products, rather than by value-
adding economic activities;
o illicit, depend heavily on black and gray markets that operate outside and at the expense of legal and formal
economic activity of the state;
o predatory. they are based on the deliberate and systematic use of violence to acquire assets, control trade,
and exploit labor.
o highly dependent on external financial and commodity networks that provide access to the globalized
marketplace.
• the functions of violence in armed conflicts: violence expand its purpose and target. in the case of Angola and Sierra
Leone, violence is used to capture or protecting natural resource endowments, diverting humanitarian aid, and
controlling trade routes.
Greed and Grievance
• economic factors were more salient to the risk of civil war, and in ways that may appear counterintuitive.
• Collier:
o objective political grievances have no direct link to the onset of conflict
o where there are accessible natural resources and a mass of ill-educated youth, rebel movements have a
powerful incentive to use violence to aquire wealth and the oppotunity and means to do so
• "greed theory" of rebel-lion (Collier) :
o motives of rebel actors: greed or loot-seeking rather than grievance or justice-seeking was the key factor in the
onset of violent rebellion.
§ -> economic resources are not simply pursued
o opportunity for organized violence: the feasibility of rebellion, and the way that access to finances (especially
lucrative natural resources), diaspora net- works, and high levels of poorly educated youth contribute to this
oopoturnity, regardless of motivation.
o Tool: “stakeholder analysis” of civil war
o improving structural prevention:
§ design new tools and strategies
§ more effective resource management and equitable economic governance, both locally and globally
§ Correctly identifying those actors who are engaged in war for profit may also help to identify
opponents to and spoilers of peace settlement
Objective and design of the book
• use qualitative case studies to ascertain the causal impact on specific conflicts of economic factors relative to and in
combination with other potentially significant political, ideological, ethic, and security factors.
• examine the impact on conflict of prior economic conditions
o such as: low growth and socioeconomic inequality within and between groups, the economic policies of
national governments and international actors
• access to different forms and amounts of financial and material resources
• most of the influential studies of the economies of conflict
o focused exclusively on the predatory behavior of rebel or insurgent groups.
o treat rebel groups as unitary actors with a common interest in predation.
o -> Risk casting all insurgencies as an extreme form of common criminality, but effectively forecloses
examination of the conflict-promoting effects of corruption and rent-seeking on the part of state agents and
other important actor
o treating rebel groups as unitary actors falls to capture the ways that economic opportunities and incentives
may interact with a range of other motivations to shape the behavior of differently situated rebel actors and
their coramitment to the insurgency
o it is important to examine the internal dynamics of combatant groups, including the patterns of economic
redistribution within them
20
• a historical perspective is indispensable.
• conflict dynamics are highly fluid
• Placing armed conflicts in their global and regional geographic context is also critical to understanding their dynamic
• a distinguishing feature of these war economies is their intimate connection to the increasingly decentralized nature of
global aid, trade, and finance
• the relative capacity of the state to perform core functions in economic dimentions of armed conflicts
o the provision of security
o effective governance throughout its territory
o the equitable distribution of public goods
o for example, in Africa, resource-driven rebellions may be more a function of weakened States
• however, the relevance of this framework for understanding conflicts in the rest of the world remains largely
unexplored.
o extending empirical investigations on the economic dimensions of conflicts in Europe, South and Hast Asia,
South America, and the Pacific may help to shed further light on the nature of these conflicts and their
resolution.
o On the other hand, because the historical, institutional, cultural, and economic endowments of these regions
are distinct from each other, they may offer new insights for our understanding of the economic dynamics of
armed conflict
Slim, H. (1997) Relief Agencies and Moral Standing in War: Principles of Humanity, Neutrality, Impartiality and Solidarity,
Development in Practice, 4, pp. 342-352.
The article explores the moral difficullies for international humanitarian workers operating as third parties in war zones. The
main part examines current usage of the terms 'humaniry'. 'neutraliry','impartiatity', and 'solidarity', as they are used in the
discourse of humanilarian operations. The article then considers the psychological implications for relief workers of operating
as non-combatans third panies in war. Finally, the article recognises that a range of different positions is both inevitable and
desirable in a given conflict, but concludes by emphasising the responsibility of any third-party relief rrganisation to be
transparent in its position and to preserve rather than distort traditional humanitarian principles and language. ll ends by
recommending concened support for international humanilarian Iaw and its possible reform as the best way to focus the current
debate about the place of humanitariardsm in war.
Standing for humanitarian value
• Many NGOs with wide differences in the ethical maturity and political sophistication are all competing to wotk in the
same emergency
• Meanwhile,the new NGO codes and pnnciples still lack the kind of clarity
Humanity,neutrality, and impartiality
Short explaination of origen of the principles, and their challanges
Humanity and its heresies
• ‘respect for the human being' is essential, because it extends the purview of humanitarianism to rights
• However, it restricting humanitarian concerns to relief commodities.
• humanitarian reductionists actually minimise the rights of those they seek to help
• 2 heresy:
o ‘the humanitarian imperative’ usually seems to relate only to 'humanitarian assistance' — the minimum
package of relief commodities which donor govemments are prepared to allow as emergency aid
o It offer humanitarian work a non-negotiable aspect, which is unrealistic, because negociate is always involved.
• ‘The humanitarian imperative’ displays some humanitarians ‘exaggerated sense of their own importance within a
people's vision of their own conflict
• it is also worth nothing what might be an inconsistency rather than a heresy in the current use of the principle of
humanicy and its new imperative
21
The temptation to abandon neutrality
• there is now a majority view that neutrality is
o undesirable, becausc it is equated with being unprincipled
o unachievable in practice, because relief aid is so frequently manipulated
• Being neutral means taking no part in military operations and no part in ideological battles
• Plattner:
o three key ingredients to a neutral position: abstention, Prevemion, impartiality
o "neutrality may therefore be understood as a duty to abstain from any act which, in a conflict situation, might
be interpreted as furthering the interests of one party to the conflict or jeopardising those of the other’
o ->‘Interpretation’ of actions and events could be truely dangerous in the extremely contested arena of war and
political emergencies
• many NGOs have rcjected the notion of neutrality because
o it often imposes an unacceptahle silence upon them in the face of grievous violations of human right
o abiding by neutrality’s commitment to prevention and abstention seems increasingiy unfeasible in the light of
what we now know about the manipulation of relief supplies, and the fact that combatants and civilians are
intrinsically mixed in today’s civil wars
• the majority of Orgs simply do not have the means to negociate and secure a rigorous position of neutraiity in their
relief
• Relief agencics need to decide if they are going to abide by it or not. If they are, they should ensore that they acquire
the appropriaie skilis. If they are not. they should not discredit the principle simply on the grounds that it is at odds with
their own mandate and capabilities
Embracing impartiaiity
• neutrality may stop an Organisation from taking sides (milirarily or ideologicaily) and protect it from public criticism. but
it does not prevent an Organisation from having a principled position, based on firm ideals
• ICRC: makes no discrimination as to nationality, race, religious beliefs, class or political opinions. It endeavours to relieve
the suffering of individuals, being guided solely by their needs, and to give priority to the most urgent cases of distress.
• For advocacy-driven NGOs and robust peace-keepers: justifying a strategy of spealdng out or shooting out while also
maintaining humanitarian values
• “active impartiality” (MSF) : not neutral and abstentionist. Impartiality to persons, but not to their actions.
Leaning towards solidaricy
• 'what solidarity operations have in common is a political goal shared with the people" (African Rights. 1994: 26. 27)
• The idea of solidaroty obviously involves taking sides
• a principie for those who backed long-established (and often non-violent) resistance movements
• 'innocencebased solidarity': the lowest common denominator of innocence is usually drawn along lines of sex and age.
o = vulnerable groups
o -> such a position is often simplistic and ill-informed.
Moral stance and personal moraie
• a clear sense of the moral positioning of third-pany organisations in war is important because it effects on staff morale.
o where their particular Organisation Stands
o what position it is taking as a third party
o Their own personal contribution must make sense as a moral and active one within the violence around them
Behind the words
• 3 main ideals to reframe humanitarian principles:
o A commitment to the principle of humanity — albeit it in a minimal form
o a desire to speak out (or shoot out) in the face of human-rights abuses
o a guarantee of third-pany immunity for humanitarian agencies
22
• the challange is to clearify humanitarain terms and the principles to which they refer, so preserving their legitimacy and
effectiveness in war.
Hanlon, J. Chapter 6: ‘The Social Contract and Violent Conflict,’ pp. 137-160, in Yanacopulos and Hanlon, Civil War, Civil Peace.
this chapter examines the relative utility of competing explanations for the causal roles of economic factors in civil wars and
highlights their implications for policy and practice by the UN and other international actors.
‘politic-economic’ approaches: This conceptual framework not only examines the interrelationship between economic and
political causes, but also integrates complementary state-centric and rebel-centric theories regarding economic predation,
kleptocracy, political protest, and weak states.
This chapter is organized into the following sections: first, an overview of four theories on the causes of civil war; second, a brief
history of conflict in Angola, Sierra Leone, and the DRC; third, an evaluation of the literature with reference to the case studies;
fourth, an analysis of three relatively underemphasized dimensions of conflict within main-stream debate (regionalization,
privatization, and globalization); and finally, an examination of four types of UN Intervention (humanitarian assistance,
mediation, peacekeeping, and sanctions) in the three cases.
Economic and Political Causes of Civil War
Economic cause
• Theories:
o Collier
§ relatively little correlation between the incidence of armed conflict and factors such as inequality, lack
of democracy, and ethnic diversity. Rather, the most powerful risk factor is a high dependence upon
primary commodity exports
§ other significant positive correlations with the probability of conflict include large diaspora
populations, geographic dispersion, a prior history of war, low levels of education, high population
growth, low average income, and economic decline.
o William Reno
§ chronic diversion of state economic resources through patronage networks leads to the creation of a
"shadow state" and increases the risk of civil war
§ fragmentation of shadow states occurs when a ruler is no longer able to maintain control over these
channels of wealth accumulation and distribution
Political causes
• Theories
o Frances Stewart : "horizontal inequality"
§ Group identity may be constructed in terms of region, ethnicity, class, or religion.
§ four general sources of economic and political differentiation between groups: political participation,
economic assets, employment and incomes, and social access and Situation
§ private costs and benefits, state capacity, and the availability of resources are also relevant explanatory
variables
o Mohammed Ayoob
§ erosion of legitimate authority and a lack of capacity for effective governance offer the best
explanation for the cause of civil war in developing countries
23
State Failure
• Reno’s Shadow state & Ayoob’s theory: the fundamental source of disorder in developing countries is structural: a lack
of legitimate authority, and internal conflict. This appears to be applicable in the cases of Angola, Sierra Leone, and the
DRC.
Insurgency
• The work of Frances Stewart provides a useful framework for discerning aspects of group mobilization for rebellion.
• In Zaire/DRC, identity was primarily constructed according to regional and ethnic criteria, although sources of
differentiation leading to rebel mobilization were probably factors, such as poverty and a lack of personal security.
Horizontal inequality also explains some aspects of the large-scale violence in Rwanda and Liberia that subsequently
served as a catalyst for the outbreak of conflict in Zaire and Sierra Leone.
• Collier is correct to suggest that all insurgencies require material resources, but his a priori assumption that all societies
have grievances and would therefore erupt into civil war if given the right mix of opportunities ignores a crucial variable:
governance.
• Jeffrey Herbst: the viability and form of a rebel movement can only be properly deter-mined in relation to the
capacity of the state it is challenging.
Transformation
• Empirical evidence suggests a high degree of market and state interdependence at the macro level, as well as a complex
mix of economic and political motivations at a micro level.
• Yet the political economy of civil wars also continually changes over time, yielding different functions of violence at
different points throughout the duration of the conflict
• it is also important to recognize that civil wars are neither unilinear nor teleological. In other words, conflicts do not
always proceed along the same trajectory, from one stage to another stage, toward a common predetermined
outcome.
• the armed conflicts examined herein cannot adequately be explained by the uniform logic implied by such shorthand
as "resource war."
• commercial collusion often coexists with ostensible military goals.
• economic and political motivations for armed conflict are not mutually exclusive. As for conflict duration, the
conventional wisdom appears to have proved correct for these three cases: natural resource exploitation by rebel,
government, and external forces did "fuel" these civil wars.
Regionalization
• The personal pursuit of financial incentives by rebel groups and state elites can create situations where economic and
political collusion between supposed rivals can coexist with armed conflict
• violence is often directed at civilians to extort their labor and property, yielding a lengthy self-financing conflict with
high civilian casualties.
• Economic opportunities may also create command and control problems within state militaries and rebel groups,
making conflict resolution and peacekeeping efforts more difficult. The pursuit or protection of such activities may
contradict the aims of the combatant party as a whole, potentially undermining a group's cohesion.
Globalization
• The 3 countries has shown a high degree of Integration into the global economy. These ties may be increasing both the
intensity and the duration of violence.
• Mark Duffield: violent conflict in countries such as Angola, Sierra Leone, and the DRC is not the temporary result of a
"developmental malaise," but rather indicative of a "durable disorder" where insecurity and underdevelopment are
inseparable and cyclical aspects of globalization.
• one must not only concentrate on the supply of natural resources and the demand for arms among developing
countries, but also examine the demand for natural resources and the supply of arms among developed countries.
• David Keen: “‘Interventions' are not simply something that 'the West' or the 'international Community' does to remedy
humanitarian disasters once they occur; more often than not, interventions occur prior to the disaster, perhaps helping
to precipitate it."
UN intervention
• the organizational culture of the UN Secretariat often leads to defining conflicts according to the limited means available
for Intervention and pursuing expedient rather than durable Solutions to complex problems.
Humanitarian assistance
• David Shearer, both critics and proponents of international humanitarian assistance may have overstated their cases:
relief aid neither perpetuates war nor contributes to peacebuilding to the degree typically claimed
• In these conflicts, diamonds were a far more lucrative source of financing for continued military activity than the
appropriation of relief aid, implying the potential ineffectiveness of manipulating relief supplies as a lever for
peacebuilding where viable alternative resources exist
• humanitarian aid remains a necessary but insufficient form of Intervention—analogous to treating the symptoms rather
than the causes of civil war.
• contemporary civil wars with comparatively autonomous sources of financing, including natural resource extraction,
appear to be particularly resistant to the effects of outside mediation.
• The future management of natural resources is a core dilemma for conflict mediation in states dependent upon
commodity exports.
Peacekeeping
25
• challenges for peace Implementation, including the presence of "three or more parties, of varying commitment to
peace, with divergent aims, with independent sources of income and arms, and with neighbors who are willing to buy,
sell, and transit illicit goods.”
• the regionalization, privatization, and globalization of these conflicts rendered them problematic for UN peacekeeping
operations
Sanction regimes
Conclusion
James, E. Managing Humanitarian Relief. An Operational Guide for NGOs, pp. 131-156.
The purpose of this chapter is to discuss and provide some basic tools in deciding and preparing to launch a new programme.
It covers:
• Deciding to enter
• Government relations and registration
• Legal issues
• Levels of involvement
• Dealing with HQ
26
• The emergency team
(see p.14 for the rest)
• If all states would function well, no humanitarian action would be needed. The breakdown of the state is a back-
ground issue in our course. Three main characteristics of a well-functioning state:
o regime has (democratic) accountability to population;
o Has internal & external monopoly on violence;
o Has monopoly on monetary matters (tax, issuing money, national budget)
Sources of Conflict
27
• Structural Sources (e.g., North-South Problematic)
o demise of empire
o failed states/weak states
• Social and Psychological Sources of Identity
o ethnicity
o religion
• Environmental sources
• Economic sources
• Military Technology
• Individuals?
• Development Cooperation
NOTE
• Collapsed empires (e.g., collapse of the Soviet Union & end of the Cold War)
o divide and rule from before the collapse!
o demise of central power => less restraint on rivalry
o split-up of territory (SU, Yugoslavia & Africa)
o conflict over (arbitrarily drawn) borders
o role of ethnicity & religion & desire for self-determination
o “new” elites are not necessarily more democratic => replicate old imperial order
• A need for new empires? Or UN as alternative?
• Failed/Weak States: (empirical statehood vs state sovereignty)
o non-democratic regimes
§ fear of democratization by (corrupt) elites
o weak state, authoritarianism, and corruption
§ state (public) power as access to resources
§ breakdown of two state-monopolies:
§ social exclusion & structural violence
• monetary (tax, monetary system => internal regulation)
• violence (policing internally, army externally)
• And lack of (democratic) accountability to population
o breakdown of civil society
o role of ethnicity & religion & desire for self-determination and/or participation
o tension between human rights & consolidation of state power?
o ill-conceived international support
o withdrawal of super power support
• Remember: state-building is always slow through modern state, educational system, media (promote 1 language
& homogeneous culture).Think of the Basks, Corsica, Quebec, Aborigines.
28
Social and Psychological Sources of Identity
• Ethnicity
o ethnopolitical trend started in the 60s, became visible in the 90s
o Cultural identity is a cross-class/gender/age basis for mobilization. It is a cultural bond not an
associational one.
o Redressing trauma or other grievances
o But ethnicity is malleable (clans in Somalia, rasta in the UK). Nations & ethnic groups are also imagined
communities: not everybody knows each other directly!
o Ethnicity can lead to internal inclusion and external exclusion (the other)
• Religion
o Huntington’s “Clash of Civilizations”
o Dual nature:
§ emphasis on love and tolerance
§ absolute truths
o Roughly 4 different forms:
§ Violent intolerance (Ayodhya, kill the infidels)
§ Civic intolerance (ballots instead of bullets, but not more freedom for religious minorities)
§ Non-violent tolerance
• The Dalai Lama welcomes, rather than evades, his enemies—grateful for the threat and
conflict they represent— because their presence provides the occasion to practice the
self-restraint essential to final self conquest: “tolerance can be learned only from an
enemy: it cannot be learned from your guru.”
• Violence is in reality not militant enough. It simply does not effectively protect or secure
religious identity, but, on the contrary, destroys it.
§ Civic tolerance
• Compromise of other three: violence destroys religious identity, but force may be
necessary to establish system of law and governance that protects religious freedom
Environmental Sources
Individual
Development Cooperation
Military Technology
• Chicken-and-egg affair: what came first violent conflict or the use of arms?
o Pessimists: all new weapons have been used sooner or later
o Optimists: deterrence works
• However,
o if 5% of the population wants a war, there will be a war
o proliferation of cheap, small arms has fed cycles of conflict
o landmines have long-lasting effects (also after peace accords)
o terrorism is poor man’s war
• Especially important is the breakdown of the monopoly of violence by state or colonial power:
• if the environment is unstable & history of conflict, then new weaponry can be a catalyst for war, but in system of
peaceful dialogue & fear of casualties, new weapons can prevent conflict
• Asset transfer & resource exploitation: once asset transfer becomes systemic, it is possible to speak of the political
economy of conflict
• Development cooperation & humanitarian intervention often fail to address this asset transfer (winners & losers).
According to Duffield they (involuntarily) integrate into this political economy, e.g, through exchanging currency,
local transactions, and diversion of food aid.
• War is not to win anymore, but to exploit
o warring factions cooperate
30
o so, these wars are not the continuation of politics by other means, but the continuation of economics by
other means
o resource appropriation of ethnic groups (they fall below the law).
• Top Down and Bottom Up
• More greed than grievance? Colier
• Role of international political economy
o hum. org, private enterprise, etc.
• War ec. undermines capacities for rebuilding and peace
Conclusions
Set-up
32
33
Common Themes
• legal
• moral
• differences between military and civilian interventions
• evolution of intervention
• positioning of intervening actors towards the actors in the field
• lots of debate; lack of clarity
• Next classes: distinguishing different types of actors and their roles (e.g., different types of NGOs, such as ICRC,
MSF, OXFAM)
War
34
35
MILITARY INTERVENTION
Conclusion
Lecture 4
Monday, 28 October 2019, 10:00-11:30: “Outside Actors: Donors, UN, NGOs and Coordination Issues”
1. Donor Country Governments
2. NGOs
• Theoretical overview: what are they, why have they emerged, whose interests do they serve and why?
• Distinguishing between public service contractors, solidarity organizations, neutral organizations and impartial
organizations.
• North-South issues.
• Funding arrangements and the broader issue of donors and their policies.
3. UN System
• Roles, responsibilities and mandates.
• Execution of programs & examples of UN-led humanitarian interventions: political rationale, funding levels,
assignment for leadership and coordination.
4. Regional Organizations.
5. The Military
6. The aid chain and coordination.
Required Reading:
Cramer, C. Chapter 7: ‘Greed versus Grievance,’ pp. 164-183, in Yanacopulos and Hanlon, Civil War, Civil Peace.
37
(see p.4)
The debate between economists is characterised as greed versus grievance. Economists use 'utility' as a word encapsulating
what an individual wants. Orthodox neoclassical economists assume that people's behaviour is governed by rational choices
made so as to maximise individual_'utility' and thus that the key economic driver of civil war was the opportunity to exercise
individual 'greed'. The so-called heterodox economists responded that economic grievances rather than greed were the driving
force. The split was clearest over income inequality - orthodox economists said high income inequality did not increase the risk
of civil war, while heterodox economists said high income inequality was one of the strongest predictors of civil war.
Orthodox economists hoped their methods would be more objective, and that by applying modelling techniques to databases
on civil wars they could determine roots and even predict wars. But in trying to treat all civil wars in the same way, they faced
major difficulties with defining wars, as well as problems obtaining sufficient statistical information about civil war countries.
With no precise way of defining and measuring motives, economists were forced to use alternatives that could be measured –
so called proxies - to stand in, and there was debate about the validity of these choices. These studies gained international
prominence, particularly with the World Bank, but the methods proved unable to predict wars. The problem may be that far
from being objective, the choices of models, data sets and especially proxies became subjective.
But the entry of economists into the study of civil wars forced serious consideration of economic motivations and also of the
collective action problem - why do people choose to participate in civil wars, at potential great personal cost, rather than just
be free riders who take no risks but share the benefits of victory? A variety of answers may apply, even to different people in
the same war. For orthodox economists, the issue is maximising personal utility - people feel they have more to gain than to
lose by fighting. This applies both to pure greed and to lack of alternative opportunities. But, as has already been seen, there
are many examples of people fighting for altruistic and political motivations or out of group solidarity - they join the war because
they agree the group will gain through violence, even if they may lose personally
XX
7.1 An introduction to the neoclassical economic theory of violence and war
• the main sources of civil war lay in economic factors and the key economic driver of civil war was the
opportunity to exercise individual 'greed'.
• Neoclassical economists: people's behaviour is governed by rational choices made so as to maximise
individual 'utility'
• a simple dichotomy: between greed and grievance.
(TBC)
Krause, M., Chapter Four ‘The History of Humanitarian Authority and the Divisions of the Humanitarian Field’, pp. 92-125 (the
good project)
See p.12
Krause, M., Chapter Five “The Reform of Humanitarianism”, pp. 126-146. (the good project)
See p.17
James, E. Managing Humanitarian Relief. An Operational Guide for NGOs, pp. 365-380.
See p.15
Development Initiatives (2019) Global Humanitarian Assistance Report 2019, “Executive Summary, pp. 12-13, available at
devinit.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/GHA-report-2019.pdf.
39
• Cash-transfer programming can enable recipients of humanitarian assistance to choose how best to
meet their needs and offer potential gains in dignity
OUTSIDE ACTORS
Topics
40
o He acknowledges that a range of different positions is both inevitable and desirable, but all positions have
their problems. Hence, he concludes by emphasizing the responsibility of any outside relief organization
to be transparent in its position & to preserve rather than distort traditional humanitarian principles and
language. (Some NGOs understand neither humanitarian principles nor the practical problems in applying
them and then (wrongly) start looking for the next concept).
NGO Positioning
• Central problem with interventions: there is no state (good governance & lack of gvmt authority), the
question becomes: whose & which rules/principles do you follow?
• International law on (NGO) interventions could be worked out more.
• The (confusing) debate continues; a range of positions is possible, but actors should be transparent &
know traditional hum. principles. Training is necessary
• Intervening actors should do their homework; it looks like they are reinventing the wheel, e.g.,
neutrality. The main question becomes: how are the four principles used in practice?
• Neutrality, Impartiality, and Independence each focus on one central actors, respectively, the warring
factions, the people in need, and the donor governments (and to a lesser extent the general public and
private foundations)
• But principles help to understand the different positions of intervening actors better
• Discuss positioning of humanitarian organizations on mental map
• Classify & position different groups of NGOs (explain mental map)
Impartiality
Ø Your relationship with people in need
Ø Opposite: solidarity (political causes)
Ø Independent: independent from the donner (gov, general public)
Ø independent, impartiality People in need solidarity
ICRC NPA
MSF Religious NGOs
Private NGOs/Companies
Sub-contracting
Ø ACF: food is expensive and you need to transport it. US has large food support to those NGOs, so if there’s
food programme, there’s US influence. The food org are in general less independent.
Ø NGOs with doctors is easier to be independent.
Ø Private NGOs: work a lot with the government
41
Ø NPA: Norwegian people aid
• Criticism
o The concepts political and humanitarian are used too easily. What is meant by them in each
concrete case?
o With neutrality (relation w. warring factions), we could make a 3-dimensional map
o Absence of local perspectives: what are their coping mechanisms and capacities? Enunciating
principles does not mean understanding the local situation & political and economic root causes
better.
WHICH OUTSIDE ACTORS?
• Media
o Double Nature:
§ Media can show a lot, but
§ it does generally not show its own limitations (financial constraints, preferences, etc.)
o Paradoxically, we need the media to criticize the media.
• Donor Country Governments
o Donors: Reactions by Governments
§ -> Is there a CNN effect? (i.e. die to the attention of media, governments start to get
interested in crisis)
§ Does the media influence donors?
• Depends on the nature of the actor involved
o Often donor governments don’t act:
§ powerful actor involved, e.g., China in Tibet
§ negative interpretation
• Kaplan’s “Coming Anarchy”
• Rwanda after Somalia
• Bosnia as Quagmire (Consequence of Vietnam)
• What can we gain in Syria?
• compassion/donor fatigue just like the general public
o Govts allow humanitarian action as smoke-screen, but don’t address root causes or support
larger intervention: containment and change?
o They lack understanding, e.g., Somalia
o Finally (when it is often (too) late)
§ small groups (idealists & foreign policy wonks) can “shame” gvmt into action;
§ gvmts act when their legitimacy and (ir)responsibility are challenged
§ some gvmts (cultures) are more activist than others (e.g., Nordic Countries)
o It is important to come up with remedies that transcend the simplistic humanitarian/political
divide, that make addressing root causes & working with the local population feasible.
o Currently, integration of security, relief, rehabilitation, and development, but is it the right kind
of integration?
o Bosnia-Herzegovina (see chapter by Smilie and Evenson)
§ Funded beyond capacity for good management
§ Short-term funding & Delays in funding
§ Faddish nature; linear programming; not participatory; not building on local initiatives
§ No overhead, no recurrent costs
§ Heavy reporting requirements
§ Also legal problems & issues w. local governments!
42
o L.t. capacity building or direct service delivery: chances for democratization were wasted.
o Even donor org. (e.g., UNHCR) that suffer themselves from these problems make the same
mistakes to other organizations
o Greener pastures; repeating mistakes?
• UN system
• NGOs and ICRC
• Military
• Regional Organizations
• Aid Chain and Coordination
Lecture 5
Required Reading:
O’Neill, R. (2016) ‘Blurred Lines, Shrunken Space? Offensive Peacekeepers, Networked Humanitarians and the Performance of
Principle in the Democratic Republic of the Congo’, pp. 105-121, in Sezgin, Z. and Dijkzeul, D. (Eds) (2016) The New Humanitarian
Actors: Contested Principles, Emerging Practice, Routledge Humanitarian Studies Series, Routledge, Milton Park.
introduction
• three interlinked historical narratives of humanitarian action.
o the appropriate relationship between civilian and military actors.
o the shrinking of ‘humanitarian space’ under the political pressure of the war on terror.
o the increased danger faced by humanitarians now targeted by extremist groups
• Humanitarian space is a countermovement, an attempt to redefine what it means to be humanitarian in the
wake of armed humanitarianism in Somalia, Rwanda, Kosovo, Afghanistan and Iraq
• Study on the close relationship between humanitarian and military actors:
o Fassin (2010):
o humanitarian and military actors inhabit the same ‘time-space’, their presence in a country signalling
the more or less temporary suspension of state sovereignty.
o within this time-space, humanitarian and military actors share a set of norms and institutions separate
from those practised by either the local population or the government in question.
• humanitarian space must be viewed as a countervailing movement not only against the external
manipulation of aid, but, internal to humanitarianism itself.
• two interlinked arguments:
o 1. in the case of Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), humanitarian networking has helped
produce and legitimise new forms of hybrid peacekeeping more akin to global counterinsurgency
warfare.
§ This chapter describes the intimate relationship between humanitarians and MONUSCO
(United Nations Organization Stabilization Mission) in DRC, especially its new Force
Intervention Brigade (FIB).
o 2. it details the various types of resistance that have taken place in the DRC against this new form of
humanitarian war, in particular among international NGOs.
43
§ humanitarian space advocacy has taken the form of ‘Othering’, political exclusion meant to
shame ‘mainstream’ NGOs who maintain relations with military and political actors
• article structure: four sections:
o 1. it reviews the theoretical literature on NGOs as network actors, adding some pertinent insights
from the broader field of social theory.
o 2. it discusses the contribution of humanitarian actors to three top-down UN agendas – integration,
stabilisation, and protection of civilians – demonstrating how each has further militarised
peacekeeping practice, resulting in the present ‘neutralisation’ mandate in the DRC.
o 3. it details the reaction on the part of the NGO community to this latest development
o 4. it concludes by drawing broader observations as to the general challenges faced by NGOs seeking
to carve out an independent humanitarian space.
A Strange Case of FIB and DRC: Integration, Stabilisation and Protection of Civilians
44
• After Rwanda genocide, UN reached the conclusion that peacekeeping and humanitarian assistance often
work together
o -> many NGOs argue that coordinating with political and military actors is jeopardising the neutrality,
impartiality and independence of humanitarians
o Humanitarians have taken the opportunities afforded them by UN integration in order to expand their
reach inside the UN, using the cluster system and other such venues in order to increase their
professional and personnel relations with military strategists and stabilisation planners
o while NGOs have sought to take advantage of UN integration so as to both increase their own profiles
and humanise peacekeeping policy, their actions have nevertheless reproduced problematic
assumptions about the origins of violence, the direction of political authority (e.g. topdown), and the
necessity of international intervention, assumptions which now guide both the FIB and the broader
practice of humanitarian war
• Stabilisation : a set of policies and practices aimed at enhancing the gaze of the state, allowing it to see and
know its subjects inside out.
o This includes anything from the use of drones to rapid response police forces and financial controls
on aid flows, for instance, those contained in Executive Order 13224 and the US Patriot Act (Minear
2012: 60).
• stabilisation in the DRC is not simply a top-down US agenda, as in Afghanistan and Somalia. It is in fact
implicitly, if not explicitly, supported by the NGO community. 4 reasons:
o 1. because the FARDC are perceived by the Congolese to be both the biggest threat to security and
the only option for the future, many NGOs have embraced the core tenants of counterinsurgency,
albeit indirectly, working to make both MONUSCO and FARDC better, meaning more ‘liberal’ warriors
o 2. successive mandates have strung together stabilisation and protection of civilians as if they were
one and the same thing
o 3. many communities now fall somewhere in between humanitarian emergencies and regular
development contexts, with many donors not wanting to fund longer-term projects out of fears of
future conflict
o 4. top-down approaches to peacekeeping alone will not bring an end to war, many mainstream
development NGOs have sought to expand their programming into the area of peace building
• -> an emerging consensus among SSU, peace-building organisations, and multi-mandate NGOs that conflict
is also a local matter and that peace must begin at the community level.
• while peace happens from the bottom up, war ends from the top down, in particular by enhancing state
visibility and eliminating foreign peace ‘spoilers’
45
• recent DPKO/DFS (UN Department of Peacekeeping Operations/Department of Field Support) training
module notes that:
o ‘necessary actions’ to protect civilians under imminent threat may include: ‘preventive, pre-emptive,
or responsive actions taken to avert, mitigate or respond to an identified threat’.
o a threat of violence against a civilian is considered imminent from the time it is identified as a threat,
until such a time that mission analysis (a combination of military intelligence, human rights and
humanitarian findings, and political analysis) can determine that the threat no longer exists.
From Protection to Neutralisation and Back: The FIB in the DRC
• the approach of NGOs towards the FIB has been that of cautious ‘internal’ critique, meaning that
humanitarians have sought to evaluate the performance of the FIB against what is contained in the mandate
• The problem : it assumes that UNSC mandates are humanitarian.
• However, by accepting the general framework of neutralisation, they have invariably sacrificed the pretence
of neutrality, to say nothing of independence and impartiality.
• Three lessons :
o 1. humanitarian NGOs in the DRC have sought to take advantage of top-down UN reforms like
integration, stabilisation and PoC in order to increase their leverage over peacekeeping policy, in part
as a means of counterbalancing regional and Security Council demands for more aggressive action.
46
o 2. while humanitarian NGOs have sought to expose the most overtly manipulative of MONUSCO’s
policies, such as IoS, they have also helped reinforce problematic assumptions about the nature of
armed conflict (e.g. the idea that war begins and ends with the absence or presence of soldiers).
§ This has both shaped their policy critique (which generally targets MONUSCO’s failure to live
up to its mandate, without questioning that mandate itself) and lent implicit support to the
present ‘neutralisation’ mandate of the FIB.
o 3. NGO engagement with MONUSCO has prompted some humanitarian organisations to reconsider
their relationships with both the UN and multi-mandate NGOs, deploying the concept of
humanitarian space as a means of shaming ‘mainstream’ NGOs for their betrayal of humanitarian
principles, while presenting themselves as the defenders of tradition.
§ Humanitarian space has thus emerged as a counter-principle, a means of severing civilian-
military networks and carving out an independent humanitarian space;
§ -> But humanitarian space is constantly shifting depending on the protagonists involved.
§ Humanitarian space is not simply a question of principle, but politics as well, the limits of the
humanitarian community being the product of networking, negotiation and alliance
formation.
O’Neill, R. (2016) ‘Rebels without Borders: Armed Groups as Humanitarian Actors’, pp. 126-140, in Sezgin, Z. and Dijkzeul,
D. (Eds) (2016) The New Humanitarian Actors: Contested Principles, Emerging Practice, Routledge Humanitarian Studies
Series, Routledge, Milton Park.
Introduction
• examining rebel–NGO relations and the adoption of humanitarian ideology by rebel factions.
• The argument:
o NGO–rebel relations have now returned to the agenda, this time as a means of counterbalancing
the increasingly partisan nature of UN peacekeeping operations.
o for many insurgent groups : working with NGOs holds the key to attaining international
recognition; some even being able to identify themselves as ‘humanitarian independence’ to
discredit their counterinsurgency operations.
o Humanitarian space is now saturated, making neutral, impartial, and independent humanitarian
action increasingly difficult.
• NGOs serve as nodes in broader funding and policy networks, crossing the threshold between civil
society, the state and international institutions
o it also means they contribute to the institutional multiplicity of recipient societies, implanting
foreign interests, norms and institutions (e.g. audit culture, liberal human rights, etc.) deep
within the socio-economic landscape of Third World states.
o their presence within multiple, overlapping funding and policy networks, including informal
distribution partnerships with insurgents – provides them with their own form of institutional
multiplicity
• UN Resolution 1514 : ‘right of independence’: not only conferred formal recognition upon a number of
rebel groups in Southern Africa, it also provided NGOs significant room to manoeuvre in terms of
support for these organisations.
• armed humanitarian intervention: three factors led to the gradual delegitimisation of large-scale,
formal, humanitarian–rebel relations.
o 1. SRRA in South Sudan :
47
§ the SPLA, through SSRA, ‘taxed’ food aid to feed soldiers (Maxwell 2012: 212),
§ used these same taxes to finance ‘visa’ departments dedicated to the seizure and control
of aid (Lavergne and Weissman 2004: 155)
§ directed NGOs to key strategic zones so as to deter government attacks (ibid.: 154).
§ -> The lesson learned in South Sudan, then, was that aid can help prolong war
o 2. Rwanda genocide
§ The international community launched a massive aid campaign to preserve the lives of
Hutu refugees, failing, however, to discriminate between civilians and armed combatants
and eventually fuelling a resurgence of war.
§ -> do no harm
o 3. NGOs have developed increasingly close relations with the UN, just as the UN has become
increasingly involved in counterinsurgency operations
o 4. 9/11 and the war on terror have resulted in the gradual shifting of aid flows away from
‘negotiated access’ to ‘post-conflict reconstruction’ (Duffield 2007: 133).
§ For many NGOs, this shift in funding has meant greater harmonisation with the
government and armed forces and an equivalent marginalisation of rebel groups
§ changes to both the political economy of rebellion and humanitarian action have reduced
African rebels to hidden partners.
Focus on one particular lineage of Rwandan and Ugandan backed rebels, explain how each group has sought to court
international opinion by presenting itself as humanitarian, ultimately in order to win diplomatic support for its cause.
• from the case of Congo, the author argues that rebellion had long ceased to be an ideological
enterprise. Rather, the end goal of insurgency in Congo was now ‘recognition’, for in the post-Rwanda,
post-Apartheid world, international approval held the key to attaining a piece of the freshly baked
power-pie.
CNDP: The Humanitarian Mystique
• CNDP successfully used propaganda to manipulate internatioanl opinion, and won the election. The
propaganda includes: a sophisticated media strategy (website, radio station, interview with foreign
journalists), investing money in development projects (e.g. rebuild local schools and health centres,
paying teacher’s salaries and buying generators for a health centre ), and a parallel governance structure
including a Social Affairs Commission headed by Dr Alexis Kasanzu, who was wellknown among
humanitarians (Stearns 2012a: 65).
• M23 did its best to facilitate easy access to displaced peoples and their host communities so as to
ensure good relations with NGOs, it also deployed humanitarian language and reasoning as part of an
ideological war against the UN. It sought to paint itself as a reliable humanitarian partner, while publicly
demonising the already demonic FARDC so as to dissuade the UN from partnering with the army.
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The Humanitarian Response: NGO Perceptions of M23
• Even M23 is comparatively a ‘better‘ partner for HA workers, that doesn’t means that international
NGOs and/or individual humanitarians were sympathetic to M23’s cause. Most of the humanitarian
agree that M23 was/is a Rwandan rebel group the sole purpose of which was to exploit Congolese
mineral deposits both for personal gain and to the benefit of the Rwandan state. And while M23 was a
reasonably reliable administrative partner, its human-rights record negated its many attempts to
position itself as a humanitarian actor.
• In October 2013, the M23 fired at a UN helicopter with a UN humanitarian mission inside because they
could not distinguish between UN transport bringing aid, and UN transport bringing artillery.
• MONUSCO has sought to integrate humanitarian and military action, whether or not it has intentionally
sought to disguise combatants as humanitarians for strategic advantage, this nature run the risk of
blurring the lines between the preservation of humanitarian neutrality and independence and active
support for insurgents.
The Fallout: M23, MSF and the Campaign to Protect Humanitarian Space
• in arguing against the blurring of ‘civilian–military’ lines, NGOs like MSF indirectly advance the political
position of insurgents. Ironically, when MSF speaks out against humanitarian complicity in war, labelling
multi-mandate NGOs ‘Wilsonian’ and denouncing organisations who partake in post-war reconstruction,
they make the same point as Al-Shabaab, implicitly accusing these organisations of imperialism.
• some within MSF have sought to rethink humanitarian space advocacy, arguing that humanitarians must
keep their distance from all armed actors, whether the UN, the national army or insurgents
o -> however, Not only would this require NGOs to turn down reconstruction moneys at a time of
reduced humanitarian assistance, but, it would also mean refusing to work with rebel groups like
M23 who manipulate humanitarian sentiment, potentially sacrificing access to those in need.
• What is clear, however, is that NGOs need to change the terms of engagement with both rebels and the
UN.
• rebel–NGO relations are caught somewhere between all-out war and covert support.
• However, many African insurgents are now ‘hip to the game’, understanding that international
recognition holds the key to accessing state power, some having even created their own humanitarian
wings to serve this end.
• in many cases African rebels have abandoned their old rhetoric in favour of humanitarian reason,
including arguments pertaining to the blurring of civilian–military relations and humanitarian space.
Such rhetoric places humanitarians in an unenviable position of inadvertently supporting causes with
which they would not otherwise agree, if only to help counterbalance the power of the Security Council.
49
TOPICS
United Nations
50
• The overall results of the 2005/2006 round of UN reform (CERF, Pooled Fund and Cluster Approach) are
positive. Improvements are still taking place. These are efforts to overcome the functional
decentralization of the UN System via financing and new cooperative bodies.
• UN plays a more central role. This is not easy for NGOs, who have now been appointed as co-heads of
some clusters.
• Much depends on the cluster leads. If they are good, the clusters can be successful.
• Local NGOs are rarely included in the cluster approach, they receive work (and money) from
international NGOs and UN organizations.
• 2011 another round of reforms
• 2016 WHS: localization, long-term funding
Conclusions on the UN
• The overall results of the 2005/2006 round of UN reform (CERF, Pooled Fund and Cluster Approach) are
positive. Improvements are still taking place. These are efforts to overcome the functional
decentralization of the UN System via financing and new cooperative bodies.
• UN plays a more central role. This is not easy for NGOs, who have now been appointed as co-heads of
some clusters.
• Much depends on the cluster leads. If they are good, the clusters can be successful.
51
• Local NGOs are rarely included in the cluster approach, they receive work (and money) from
international NGOs and UN organizations.
• 2011 another round of reforms
• 2016 WHS: localization, long-term funding
MILITARY INTERVENTION
• Differentiate actual use of force from facilitating peace accords & protecting hum. relief!
• In all but peace-enforcement and outright war consent of the parties is crucial
• Peace enforcement has been the least successful in practice, e.g., Somalia. It can also compromise
impartiality/neutrality of humanitarian organizations: arms-length distance
• threat of force (deterrence) does not function as in inter-state conflict. It is more limited, because factions are
already fighting. After Somalia and Rwanda, most thugs don’t have a high opinion of peacekeeping forces.
• The release and transfer of prisoners (military can take care of security and logistics)
• Logistics and engineering (as with natural disasters, e.g., food transport, infrastructure (tents, bridges,
simple buildings, heavy equipment))
• Search for missing persons
• Mine awareness / Demining
• Civilian-Military Cooperation (CIMIC), e.g., information exchange, security meetings
• NGOs & military can train each other on operations, on rebuilding, on international humanitarian law,
etc.
• Security/Protection is a hot issue. Generally, NGOs like to remain independent.
• Humanitarians do not want the military to do humanitarian tasks, but they accept facilitation and
protection more easily
• ->In principle, this can all be done under civilian control, for example with a national government, or a
UN interim administration, which will help to maintain independence, neutrality, and impartiality
Implementation: Diversity in Mandates of the Military
• Under which Security Council resolution? What are the exact contents (tasks, enforcement,
duration)?
• Which countries contribute? What can they contribute (equipment, quality of manpower, etc.)
• Who leads the force?
• quality of the commander of the forces;
• quality of the Special Representative of the Secretary General & UN HQs’ support;
• Do donor countries support the SRSG and commander?
->(Do we need African operations led by Africans?)
• Countries in Crisis:
o Namibia/Angola
o Mozambique
o Iraq / Kuwait
o Somalia
o Rwanda
o DRC
o Former Yugoslavia
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o Sierra Leone/
Liberia/
Ivory Coast
o Kosovo
o East Timor
o Darfur
o Afghanistan (after 9/11 and now)
o Iraq (after 9/11 and now)
o Libya
o Syria
o Discussion of (parts of) this history in the coming few slides
• After the Kuwait war/Operation Desert Storm, Sadam Hussein attacked Shiites in southern Iraq and
Kurds in Northern Iraq
• Military contingents were late and they were not able to provide proper health care to fleeing Kurds in
Northern Iraq
• Turkey did not allow the refugees in. Other countries allowed this to happen. They wanted to placate an
important ally, so that political objectives of rich countries overode the humanitarian needs.
• The North (Iraqi Kurdistan) became a semi-indepedent state, which, after some internal Kurdish conflict,
did better than the rest of Iraq under Sadam Hussein
Implementation: Rwanda
Implementation: Goma
• International military did not separate genocidaires from the bona fide refugees. Allowed weapons in
the camps, so that they became bases for attacks and rearmement
• Bad water equipment (Oxfam story)
• Mil. did divert resources away from cheaper NGO options, they were not able to stem the sky-high
mortality
• Started the wars in the Congo (much higher mortality than Rwanda in absolute numbers)
Implementation Kosovo
54
Afghanistan
Implementation: Afghanistan
55
Implementation: Iraq
Iraq
Libya
• IS is partly a creation of former Baath officials (supporters of Sadam Hussein). In a sense, it is the worst
possible outcome of a military intervention
• Nobody knows how to deal with IS, or Assad for that matter.
• Russia, Hezbollah and Iran support Assad. US, Saudi Arabia and Turkey go their own way. Who
intervenes? Who works with whom?
• Syrian Kurdistan is also becoming more independent
• Humanitarian organizations cannot enter. No overview of what the local organizations are doing. Issue
of business continuity management and local networks of hum. orgs that outsiders do not understand
56
Implementation in the DRC
Background:
57
o Debates among humanitarians (MSF vs others in discussion on real humanitarianism & M23
taking over hum. work and arguments to position itself (e.g., vis-à-vis FARDC (Forces armées de
la république démocratique du Congo)).
• Phase IV B: Vulgarization or democratization of violence: 79-100 armed groups?
• Note: these discussions keep coming back. The Congolese state has not been strengthened
There are such big problems associated with the use of force that we need to gauge the alternatives:
• Prevention
• Humanitarian action alone. Sometimes this has been more effective, sometimes this was an excuse for
international political inaction. Central question: are the root causes tackled?
• Development cooperation (same question)
• Sanctions (blunt instrument) & Conditionality
• Denunciations (Naming and Shaming)
• Denial of diplomatic privileges
• Let them fight it out
o the end of the war
o hurting stalemate/ripeness of conflict
o can imply genocide?
• Comparing the different types of intervention (and war), there are more civilian missions and NGO
activities than military interventions and war. Even peace enforcement remains limited only in rare
cases, but they get most attention.
• Military/UN/NGO relationship is here to stay, but it is often an uneasy relationship: military remain a
political tool & it can compromise humanitarian actors
• Different perception of mandates; how do Military perceive their mandate and how do NGOs perceive
their mandate? In principle, the mandates can be complementary with protection and facilitation.
Rarely do scholars or politicians want to abolish the use of force completely
• Cold War end, Somalia, Rwanda, Afghanistan: pendulum swinging back and forth from optimism to
pessimism. These swings will continue.
58
• Shift towards war and unilateralism with Kosovo, Afghanistan and Iraq (now pendulum swings back)
• Hum. orgs went from active optimism in the early 1990s to a backseat role in int. politics.
• Peace enforcement has been the least successful in practice, e.g., Somalia
o Military not good at establishing security
o Military often unwilling to do protection work (in particular disarmament)
o Military not good at providing humanitarian assistance
• The general solution is to delineate the respective roles and tasks of humanitarian and military actors
better, but better communication: at arms length
• This was neglected in Afghanistan and Iraq
• Three possible scenarios in military-humanitarian relations:
o Back to mid 1990s: Greater Independence for hum. orgs
o With the War on Terror as a return to the Cold War with strong donor influence
o A feeling of insecurity: we don’t know how to exactly respond to specific crises, e.g., in Syria or
Yemen.
• Lost of hard work for hum. orgs to regain/retain their independence, neutrality and impartiality, as well
as operational effectiveness and political influence
• Obama’s Administration is an improvement in terms of humanitarian independence. Trump’s
administration is ill-structured.
“Should mil. & hum. orgs work together, and if so, how?”
Lecture 6
Monday, 11 November 2019, 10:00-11:30: “Victims, Beneficiaries, or Participants? Local Population, Internally Displaced
People and Refugees”
1. Outcomes of actions: conflict resolution, refugee resettlement, social and political reconstruction. What goes right?
What goes wrong? Where do we go from here?
2. Coping mechanisms, capacities, capabilities, and vulnerabilities.
3. Participation.
Required Reading:
Thomas, A. Chapter 1: ‘Reflections on Development in a Context of War,’ pp. 185-204, in Yanacopulos and Hanlon. Civil War,
Civil Peace.
Chapter summary
The exhortation 'Don't just do something - stand there!' means not rushing into action, while at the same time not acquiescing
to human rights abuses or escalations of violence. Make it clear that outsiders are watching, and be clear of one's own position
and how to act within your own values.
59
Development has been defined as good change, but it can often be disruptive. Sometimes war can bring about good change.
So one needs a better definition of development. It can be seen as a vision of a better society, an historic process of social
change, and as deliberate efforts at improvement. Development agencies frequently take only the third definition and use it to
describe what they do, but that is much too restrictive.
Two versions of the historic process are the neoliberal modernisation view, which sees the inexorable spread of growth through
markets and a dynamic capitalism, and the structuralist view which sees change occurring through political and economic
struggles between groups.
Three visions of development are presented: modern industrial society, which is particularly linked to the capitalist market
economy and sometimes to democracy; human-centred development, which is linked to realisation of human potential and has
more social and political content; and cleaning up the messes created by modern capitalist development, which includes dealing
with poverty and environmental problems. In the early twenty-first century, the deliberate efforts, neoliberal, cleaning up view
dominated. This narrow approach is characterised by the Millennium Development Goals.
Civil war can be triggered by a clash between alternative visions of development and alternative versions of the historic process.
Development need not wait for peace, and developmental interventions can be peacebuilding if they meet social goals and put
a greater stress on process and emphasising how tasks are done, rather than on simple efficiency in carrying out projects.
Development is not done by the state or an agency alone, but through broader public action.
(See p.4)
Krause, M., Chapter 2, ‘Beneficiaries as Commodity’, pp. 39-69.
• The author aims to explore what is the logic of practice in this field, and further, explain what does the shared practices
of the field mean for the role populations in need play in humanitarian relief.
• in the course of planning and delivering projects, two subtle shifts happen.
o 1. while the rhetoric evokes populations in need in general or in a whole area, practically speaking only a subset
of populations in need becomes relevant as potential or actual "beneficiaries"
o 2. while beneficiaries are an end of relief work, beneficiaries also become a means of delivering relief work :
they are part of a commodity being sold to donors in a quasi market.
• The concept of commodity: highlights the way projects are produced, paid for, and involve labor. The producers in this
market are not maximizing profits but, to the extent that they work with institutional donors, they produce with an
orientation to exchange relief projects for money.
• The value of the project:
o value is being extracted in the process of helping them -- value is partly economic and partly symbolic for relief
agencies (money from institutional donors and the public, authority to speak about suffering) and consists in
moral and political authority for donors.
• Instrumentalization of beneficiaries:
o the result of a market in beneficiaries that has been produced by states; aid agencies, and the media in
recent decades.
NGOs as Entirely the Same as. or Entirely Separate from Populations in Need
60
• sometimes populations in need are analyzed implicitly as entirely the same as" global civil society," some
other genres of academic research analyze them as entirely separate.
• Studies in this genre consider what populations are lacking, and disregard previous intervention.
• Studies of aid or relief : never analyze populations not served or needs not fulfilled as part of the actually
existing system of relief
• Institutional donors pay for specific projects with specific aims in specific fields of expertise and in specific
places based on what they think is important, usually tied to a specific area or crisis as a result of a specific
appeal
• Fund-raisers often do try to make the link between donation and beneficiary seem as direct as possible. The
classic example is child-sponsorship
• What is the practices of producing relief and what roles these practices entail for local populations?
• Populations are often identified by what they lack: their needs are emphasized, and their political aspirations
or conflicts are deemphasized.
• Relief work is commonly divided into "sectors" according to technical expertise. Professionals need to specify
who exactly they think will be benefiting from this intervention.
• During the implementation phase a specific subset of a population in need is then transformed into
‘beneficiaries' of an intervention.
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The Labor of Populations in Need
• If the project is produced and sold, beneficiaries are not just part of that product but also labor for it.
• In the process of humanitarian relief some local populations are defined as "beneficiaries", and all other
members of the local population become part of the "environment" of relief work.
• As part of the environment of relief, some members of the local population are defined as potential threats
to security (=security for agency staff and property in the field), though the same people can be assigned
both the role of beneficiary and the role of threat at the same time
• A key element of security : "acceptance." = the active role played by local populations before and beyond any
aid being received
• beneficiaries are asked to be familiar with the agency, trust it, and serve as a network of contacts and
intermediaries to facilitate communication and reception.
• How about use assessments to anchor the beneficiaries? -> though they have become part of the response
repertoire of humanitarian relief, but not all assessments lead to actual-relief projects. And in the end create
"assessment fatigue" to the locals. (not willing.to answer questions or to participate in surveys or group
meetings)
Partnership as Subcontracting
• some agencies work with local partner organizations to deliver the project. these local partner organizations
serve a triple role:
o 1. they are a partner agency, and the staff of the partner agency are fellow relief workers
o 2. the partner agencies are also an important element of the product of relief; they too are marketed
to donors as worthy beneficiaries that are being helped: "Capacity building"
o 3. for an agency the question of whether to work with partners or not is in part a labor question.
§ cheaper than delivering services directly to beneficiaries.
§ agencies are also able to delegate the responsibilities and risks regarding parts of their labor
force
• In development work, donor agencies and aid organizations have long insisted on beneficiary "participation,"
especially sincethemid-1980s. these initiatives also increase the labor involved for beneficiaries.
• Discourse of accountability:
o Humanitarian Accountability Partnership (HAP)
o HAP introduces forms and mechanisms that require work from beneficiaries.
o As populations in need are transformed into beneficiaries, recipients have to be socialized into this
very specific role. They have to bridge the gap between their own needs and wishes, on the one hand,
and agency reality, on the other.
Relief as an Exchange
• relief as a form of production in terms of power not only among potential beneficiaries but between all the
actors involved in relief. It is not a one-way transfer of resources. Rather, itis an exchange, and more
specifically it is an exchange under conditions of competition and inequality.
• Marcel Mauss: the giver also benefits. He accumulates obligations owed to him. By seemingly wasting or
destroying material goods he accumulates symbolic credit. à recipient then owes the donor
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• Karl Marx: unequal exchange. Workers need jobs because they have lost their means of production (land) so
they are under an unequal structure of exchange (exploitation).
• Agencies "source" beneficiaries within a pool of crises and need, package them, and sell them to donors. This
means that populations in need are put in a position where they are in competition against each other, rather
than against comparatively better-off groups, in their regions, countries, or globally.
• This way of distributing relief allows donors to accumulate status, and NGOs to accumulate money and status.
Populations in need lend authority to agencies and donors under circumstances over which they have very
little control.
• Donor agencies give money and receive the symbolic benefits of having helped. Relief agencies receive
money and the symbolic benefits of having helped. Beneficiaries, even-those who do not receive anything,
lend themselves as a source of authority for those who help.
• beneficiaries are in competition with each other: some of the poorest populations, and local organizations,
are pitched against each other in a race for resources.
Direct Domination and Indirect Domination
• how people make themselves “people in need”, and then become “beneficiaries”?
• Difinition of Eigensinn
o (literally, "proper meaning"; also translated as "obstinacy") refers to the way subjects interpret their
own needs, the way they interpret the situation, the way they make decisions and act
o On the one hand, it has been interpreted as "having more will than necessary, or rational, or allowed"
by conservative interpreters or read as resistance by critical approaches:
o on the other hand, it simply means that the subject has a will of its own that cannot be reduced
• During implementation, recipients' Eigensinn can also get in the way of the smooth delivery of projected
outputs.
• Recipients also redistribute aid among themselves;
o For example, If malnourished children are targeted, I was told, people may keep their children
malnourished to obtain food rations to share with the-whole family.
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• Populations can be "aid aware" : they have previous experience of NGOs and try to work with what they have
learned.
Conclusion
• Managers' relationship to beneficiaries is not only an instrumental one but it is also an instrumental one.
• In the case of international humanitarian relief, a project is produced for exchange in a market, where it is
compared to other projects from other producers on a global scale
• However good the content and design of a specific intervention, its form as a commodity in a global market
in beneficiaries shapes its overall effect. It is a product within a limited range of possible products, given
consumer preferences of-those with resources, and it pits those helped against those not helped.
Question
• THEY ARE THE FIRST AND FOREMOST DETERMINANT OF THEIR OWN LIVES
• LOCAL ACTORS CAN BE:
o HIGHLY DIVERSE
o REFUGEES, IDPs
o LOCAL COMMUNITIES
o WARRING FACTIONS, REBELS,ETC.
• JUST HUMAN BEINGS: DON’T CONFORM TO STEREOTYPES AND INTERVENTION POLICIES
• THEIR PARTICIPATION IS CRUCIAL BUT RECEIVES INSUFFICIENT ATTENTION
• THEIR EXPERIENCE SHOULD RECEIVE MORE ATTENTION. ATTENTION IS GROWING, BUT IT IS NOT
ENOUGH YET
• IN ANY CASE, THEY WILL TAKE THEIR OWN INITIATIVES
• TRY TO UNDERSTAND:
o Power relations/Exclusion
o Decision-making bodies & procedures
o Coping Mechanisms/Capacities
o Vulnerabilities
o Language??
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o What are the entry points/points of leverage?
o Etc.
Coping Mechanisms
• COPING DEFINITION:
o Managing the physical, political and social means (resources) of gaining a livelihood (in times of
adversity)
• People always use several, overlapping cop. Mech.
• TYPES OF COPING STRATEGIES (diverse!)
o PREVENTIVE STRATEGIES:
§ The role of the state is important for large scale activities;
§ avoiding dangerous activities
§ saving & storing
§ finding save locations (buildings, migration)
o PREVENTIVE & DURING
§ Impact Minimizing Strategies (minimize loss and facilitate recovery):
• access to food, shelter, and physical security;
• diversification (e.g., non-agricultural income sources in rural areas)
• strengthening or multiplying social support networks (e.g., family or clan ties)
§ Creation and maintenance of labor power
• get children (earn income & social security)
• Building up Stores of Food and Saleable Assets:
o storage of grain or other saleable assets (buffer)
o accumulation of small stock & animals, herd size variation
• Diversification of
o Production Strategy: variety of crops, activities & landholdings (e.g., altitudes);
o Income sources: migration & remittances, crafts, extractive enterprise (charcoal, honey),
hawking, “using” the relief system.
• Development of social support networks:
o rights & obligations (family roles, rich & poor, marriage)
§ Women, children, disabled people, chronically ill people and older people generally have
the hardest time
o moral economy (patrons & clients: noblesse oblige, alms, neighborly assistance)
o ->Many of these networks are in decline!
• POST-EVENT COPING STRATEGIES (in protracted conflict this becomes an ongoing strategy, it’s not just
economic, dignity & respect are also important):
o all of the above
o but especially:
§ reducing food consumption (e.g., selling seeds);
§ labor migration & becoming a refugee;
§ petty trading (hawking);
§ accumulation of debt;
§ gathering wild foodstuffs;
§ sale or pledging of assets (livestock, land, jewelry);
§ prostitution or becoming a combatant.
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Coping Conclusions
Conclusions
• More attention to actual experiences of the local population & typical donor mistakes
• Caution: We did not differentiate between refugees and local/host communities. Their relationship can
be tense.
• Concepts such as empowerment and participation, are often used but very hard to implement
• Aid can undermine local coping mechanisms and create dependency
• We need to understand better the coping mechanisms & capacities, local decision making structures,
and cultural sensitivities
Forced Migration
• Refugees
o Protected under the 1951 United Nations Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees
• Asylum seekers
o Moved across an international border in search of protection under the 1951 Refugee
Convention, but whose claim for refugee status has not yet been determined
• Internally Displaced Persons
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o Remain in their country of origin, guaranteed certain basic rights under international
humanitarian law (the Geneva Conventions)
• Development displacees
o Forced or involuntary resettlement
• Environmental and disaster displacees
o Natural disasters, environmental change and human-made disasters
• Smuggled people
o Moved illegally for profit. Partners, however unequal, in a commercial transaction
• Trafficked people
o Moved by deception or coercion for the purposes of exploitation. The profit in trafficking people
comes not from their movement, but from the sale of their sexual services or labour in the
country of destination
• The numbers of refugees and IDPs in now higher than ever before!
• There is far less international law on IDPs than on refugees.
• Refugee system was made for refugees for communism. The few refugees who flew from communist
eastern Europe, were generally welcomed warmly. Currently, the refugee system is under great strain,
due to the great numbers.
The Guiding Principles on Internal Displacement vs. The UN Convention Related to the Status of Refugees
Protection gaps for disaster-induced cross border displacement I
• Every year, millions of people are forcibly displaced by floods, storms, earthquakes, droughts and other
natural disasters.
o Many find refuge within their own country but some have to go abroad.
o In the context of global warming, such movements are likely to increase.
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• National and international responses to this challenge are insufficient and protection for affected people
remains inadequate.
o While people displaced within their own countries are covered by national laws, international
human rights law, the UN Guiding Principles on Internal Displacement and a few regional
instruments, a serious legal gap exists with regard to disaster-induced cross-border movements.
o These people are in most cases not refugees under international refugee law, and human rights
law does not address critical issues such as their admission, stay and basic rights.
• Criteria to distinguish between forced and voluntary movements induced by natural disasters have not
yet been elaborated.
• With the adoption of paragraph 14 (f) of the Cancún Climate Change Conference Outcome Agreement in
December 2010, states recognized climate change-induced migration, displacement and relocation as an
adaptation challenge, and agreed to enhance their understanding and cooperation in this respect:
o Undertaking: “Measures to enhance understanding, coordination and cooperation with regard to
climate change induced displacement, migration and planned relocation, where appropriate, at
the national, regional and international levels”.
• Based on the outcome of the Nansen Conference on Climate Change and Displacement in Oslo (June
2011), Norway and Switzerland pledged at the UNHCR Ministerial Conference in December 2011 to
address the need for a more coherent approach to the protection of people displaced across borders in
the context of natural disasters.
• the Nansen Initiative is a state-led, bottom-up consultative process intended to build consensus on the
development of a protection agenda addressing the needs of people displaced across international
borders by natural disasters, including the effects of climate change.
o Members of the Steering Group are: Australia, Bangladesh, Costa Rica, Germany, Kenya, Norway,
Mexico, Philippines, Switzerland.
o UNHCR and the International Organization for Migration (IOM) are Standing Invitees
• Five (sub-)regional consultations are planned to take place in the regions most affected by natural
disasters and climate change (2013-2014).
o They will bring together representatives from states, international organizations, NGOs, civil
society, think tanks and others key actors working on issues related to displacement and natural
disasters, including climate change.
• The outcomes of the consultations will be compiled for a global consultative meeting (2015)
• state representatives and experts from around the world will discuss the envisaged protection agenda for
cross-border displacement in the context of natural disasters and climate change.
• The Initiative does not aim to create new legal standards but its outcomes may. Where appropriate, it will
facilitate the elaboration of such standards at domestic, regional and global levels at a later stage.
Thomas, A. (2005): Reflections on Development in a Context of War, pp. 185-204, in Yanacopulos and Hanlon. Civil War,
Civil Peace
A definition problem
(Thomas, A. (2005): Reflections on Development in a Context of War, p. 6)
• Development is an all-encompassing change, it is continuous, takes place in an individual level and at the
level of society, not always seen positively, can entail positive and negative features (p. 8)
Conclusions
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Lecture 7
Monday, 25 November 2019, 10:00-11:30: New Actors: Private Military and Security Companies and Local Actors: What
about the Humanitarian Principles?
1. New Donors
2. Local Actors
3. Alternative Principles?
Required Reading:
Joachim, J. and A. Schneiker (2016) ‘Humanitarian Action for Sale: Private Military and Security Companies in the Humanitarian
Space,’ pp. 192-209, in Sezgin, Z. and Dijkzeul, D. (Eds) (2016) The New Humanitarian Actors: Contested Principles, Emerging
Practice, Routledge Humanitarian Studies Series, Routledge, Milton Park.
introduction
• New humanitarian agents: police or security services ranging from logistics, training and consultancy to intelligence and
border control to physical protection in armed conflicts, these companies have also started to specialise in providing
humanitarian and development services themselves
• the meaning of humanitarianism
o not fixed
o contingent, ‘socially negotiated and acquiring meaning in practice’ through a variety of actors who have
different understandings of what constitutes humanitarian action
• PMSCS: not only do they purport to provide services to those in need, they also claim to have similar altruistic
motivations. Moreover, these companies regard themselves as an integral part of the peace-building or, as their
industry representatives put it, ‘stability operations’ industry
• in practice
o it becomes difficult for outsiders and those affected by crises to distinguish between PMSCs and traditional
humanitarian actors
o the boundaries between the different types of actors, tasks and sectors are becoming blurred
o non-state actors not only contribute to the delivery of humanitarian assistance and other resources but also
transform our understanding of these resources with regard to who should deliver them in what ways to which
actors.
• ‘humanitarian space’,
o traditionally defined as ‘an environment where humanitarians can work without hindrance and follow
the humanitarian principles of neutrality, impartiality and humanity’ (Spearin 2001: 22).
o However, this situation is changing as new actors such as state militaries and PMSCs are entering the
space
o These developments must be understood in the context of the changing crises in which
humanitarians work and in that of the changes within the humanitarian system
The context
• humanitarian NGOs have started to show signs of commercialisation and to base their decisions as to where
to provide humanitarian assistance on financial considerations rather than on considerations of need. This
trend is further reinforced by the ‘philanthropic capitalism’ in which business companies increasingly engage
(Hopgood 2008)
• ‘comprehensive peace-building’ approach ensure respect for human rights and to contribute more generally
to economic development, democracy and rule of law in a particular state (Barnett and Snyder 2008: 150),
which increasingly regard themselves and are increasingly regarded by others, as political agents (Terry
2002).
• These changes within the humanitarian sector are occurring in light of, and in response to, growing insecurity
in the field (Stoddard et al. 2009b).
• Not only do a growing number of them offer services to humanitarian NGOs, provide humanitarian services
themselves, or both, PMSCs also appropriate discursive elements of humanitarian NGOs such as their
language, images and symbols. By referring to themselves as an integral part of peace-building efforts, PMSCs
try to legitimise their existence in the field, and to redraw the boundaries between who does and who does
not belong to the category of humanitarian actors and to the humanitarian space.
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• local companies are usually hired by NGOs to provide unarmed guards, while transnational PMSCs are
contracted primarily to provide security training for staff, security management consulting, risk
assessment/threat analysis and physical security for premises (Cockayne 2006: 8; Stoddard et al. 2008: 10).
• NGOs attribute the need to hire PMSCs not only to lack of capacities (Stoddard et al. 2009a) but also ‘to real
and perceived growth in insecurity’
• PMSCs present the provision of their services to humanitarian NGOs as helping those in need.
• PMSCs construct their role as service providers in different ways, namely by delivering material goods and,
discursively, by evoking principles, symbols and imagery associated with the field, thereby presenting
themselves as ‘the New Humanitarian Agent[s]’ (James Fennell, of ArmorGroup, cited in Vaux et al. 2001: 14,
note 12) and as an integral part of the peace-building – or ‘stability operations’ – industry.
o The strategy of identification also extends to assertions related to their actions, which sound almost
exactly like those of humanitarian NGOs (e.g. World Vision: ‘[b]uilding a better world for children’(WV
2013) / AECOM, ‘[b]uilding a better world’ (AECOM 2012).)
o the imagery PMSCs use on their websites is almost identical to that of humanitarian NGOs
Vaux, T. (2016) ‘Traditional and Non-Traditional Humanitarian Actors in Disaster Response in India’, pp. 318-337, in Sezgin,
Z. and Dijkzeul, D. (Eds) (2016) The New Humanitarian Actors: Contested Principles, Emerging Practice, Routledge
Humanitarian Studies Series, Routledge, Milton Park.
See p.17
• The term New Actors is often used, but is not really appropriate, bc. many of these new actors have a
long history. However, they are more visible now and are entering the humanitarian mainstream (and
arena). They interact far more often with the „traditional“ humanitarian organizations. Other terms of
„new“ are unconventional or non-traditional actors (and see Tony Vaux for criticism on „traditional“ as a
concept).
• Jutta Joachim was a PhD student from Michael Barnett. Andrea Schneiker is her PhD student
• Tony Vaux was with Peter Walker co-author of the Code of Conduct
Private actors
• humanitarian assistance increasingly takes place within the context of armed conflicts
• it is often claimed that the working environment for humanitarians is becoming more and more insecure
• 1997-2008: the absolute number of violent incidents affecting aid workers increased about fivefold and
the relative number of aid worker victims doubled
• 2011: 308 aid workers were victims of major attacks = „the highest yearly number yet recorded“
(Humanitarian Outcomes 2012)
• not all regions are equally dangerous; working in Afghanistan, Somalia, Sudan, South-Sudan, Pakistan,
Syria and Sri Lanka is particular dangerous
• Still, MSF issued the report „Where is everyone.“
• „over the last five years, humanitarian organizations have increased their contracting of security and
security-related services from commercial companies“ (Stoddard et al. 2009: 1)
• no comprehensive data nor systematic analysis exist as of yet, but
o local companies are mostly hired to provide unarmed guards
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o transnational PMSCs are mainly contracted to carry out security training for staff, security
management consulting, risk assessment/threat analysis and physical security for premises
• reasons: lacking capacities of humanitarian actors, real and perceived growth in insecurity
• decisions to hire a PMSCs are often made ad hoc by local offices of humanitarian NGOs -> no systematic
knowledge, no best practices on how to deal with PMSCs
Similarities
Private Logistics Company NGO
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Local NGOs: SEWA
• Supply vs demand. SEWA likes the hum. principles, but ist members‘ priorities center on livelihoods
• Principles vs. Contextualized approaches
• See p. 334 for a comparison
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• What to do for partnership? Better balance between top-down supply-driven and demand driven
approaches. Long-term investment to understand each other better.
• What about the principles? Humanity can be linked with many supporting principles (pp. 345-349), not
just with impartiality, neutrality and independence, but also Ghandian self-reliance, for-profit, etc.
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77
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• There are therefore more humanitarianisms, not just the traditional Dunantist “red cross/MSF”
humanitarianism
• There are only a handful of Dunantist organizations, but they have been able to set the agenda, but this
may work less well in the future
Lecture 8
Required Reading:
Three chapters from Magone, C., M. Neuman, and F. Weissman (Eds) (2011) Humanitarian Negotiations Revealed: The MSF
Experience, Médicins Sans Frontières, Columbia University Press, New York, namely:
See p.19
See p.21
Weissman, F. (2011) ‘Silence Heals … From Cold War to the War on Terror: MSF Speaks out: A Brief History’, pp. 177-197.
See p.20
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• No “Golden Age”
• Space was always shrinking
o p. 2: however, there is a space for negotiation, power games and interest-seeking between AID
ACTORS and authorities
o The hum org. scope depends largely on the org.’s ambitions, the diplomatic and political support
and the interests of those in power
o Arguments/Interests: p. 3-4
§ They change over time
Lessons Learned
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o P. 5 aims, but danger of support for tormentors (Nightingale‘s risk)
o But lack of clarity: to be sure of its decisions and observations
• Keep silent
o Active impartiality/freedom of speech? MSF influencing the course of conflict?
• Know our Place
o Be modest, adjust
o But know the impact
o Be Humanitarian (not regime change, or something else)
• Justifying its choices
o Justify compromises (to itself)
o Don‘t become part of the politics of domination
• Antagonisms
o Shared interest in the way a population is being governed offers space for cooperation and
conflict
• MSF is permeable to outside influences and ideologies
o Not total freedom of action, but choose alliances acc. to its own objectives
o MSF says we `re an unreliable partner:
o Ongoing work: network of actors!
• Now: how do the principles function in practice?
o Tension between normative and causal claims;
o Humanitarian space and arena: you need both
What do these principles officialy do?
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• are useful for the justification of humanitarian action and humanitarian space
• but focus on a vertical aid chain from donors to the „field“ („international top“ to „local bottom“ of
humanitarian action)
• and hide or leave out the role and interests of other actors in aid. You need to understand these in order
to understand IMPACT!
• Pls notice that the principles are an a-political, political game. Put differently, it is a political game to not
be political
Lecture 9
Thursday, 12 December 2019, 10:00-11:30: “Rebuilding Reconsidered: Linking Relief and Development”
1. Importance of a long-term perspective: lives and livelihood, access and security. Positive and negative linkages among
political aspects, development, human rights, and participation. Three areas:
• security: a transition from war to peace and non-violent ways of conflict resolution;
• politics: a transition from an authoritarian or totalitarian system to an open, participatory system of governance
(including civil society building); and
• economy: a transition to (re-)building economic capacities, often with a higher degree of equity.
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2. Accountability and evaluation.
3. What happens if the spotlight is turned off?
Required Reading:
El-Bushra, J. Chapter 10: ‘Transforming Power Relations: Peacebuilding and Institutions,’ pp. 233-257, in Yanacopulos and
Hanlon, Civil War, Civil Peace.
See p.5
Goodhand, J. Chapter 11: ‘Preparing to Intervene,’ pp. 259-278, in Yanacopulos and Hanlon, Civil War, Civil Peace.
See p.6
Hilhorst, D (2018) ‘Classical Humanitarianism and Resilience Humanitarianism: Making Sense of Two Brands of Humanitarian
Action’. Journal of International Humanitarian Action, pp. 3:15, 1-12. available at https://doi.org/10.1186/s41018-018-0043-6 .
Abstract
Humanitarian aid has long been dominated by a classical, Dunantist paradigm that was based on the ethics of the humanitarian
principles and centred on international humanitarian United Nations agencies and non-governmental organizations. While in
previous decades alternative paradigms and humanitarianisms evolved, this classical paradigm remained the central narrative
of humanitarianism. In recent years, however, this paradigm has been paralleled by a resilience paradigm that is focused on
local people and institutions as the first responders to crises. Whereas classical humanitarianism is rooted in the notion of
exceptionalism, resilience humanitarianism starts from the idea of crisis as the new normality. This paper discusses the two
paradigms and the incongruent images they evoke about crises, local institutions and the recipients of aid. The article puts
forward the case for studying the ways in which these contrasting aid paradigms shape practices, dealing with the importance
of discourse, the social life of policy, the multiplicity of interests, the power relations and the crucial importance of
understanding the lifeworld and agency of aid workers and crisis-affected communities. The article demonstrates how the
stories that humanitarians tell about themselves are based on highly selective views of reality and do not include the role they
themselves play in the reordering and representation of realities in humanitarian crises.
introduction
• when large development agencies started to engage in humanitarian crises, the adage of linking relief to rehabilitation
to development (LRRD) was gaining importance.
o Background: War on Terror in 2001
o much aid started refocusing on its life-saving core
• ‘resilience humanitarianism’ (‘New humanitarianism’) : ‘where humanitarian assistance became more aligned with
Western liberal peace agendas’ (Gordon and Donini 2015:87).
• The article analyses the two paradigms and discusses how aid is shaped in practice
o aid provision is seen as an arena, where aid is shaped through social negotiation of actors in and around
the aid chain (Hilhorst and Jansen 2010; Hilhorst and Serrano 2010).
o This ‘arena perspective’ focuses on the everyday practices of policy and implementation and highlights how
different actors develop their own understanding and strategies around shared vocabularies, ambitions
and realities of aid, and how this leads to frictions and contradictions in aid delivery
o practices of aid are also shaped by the mandates of agencies, the way they give meaning to their work and
the assumptions they have about the local context and the population they serve.
Paradigms
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• Paradigms stand for a particular way of understanding crisis
• Policies and principles are formulated, understood and altered in the everyday practice of humanitarian
action on the ground. Humanitarian principles are interpreted differently by different actors and are more
contextual than universal (Leader 2002; Minear 1999). They only become real through the way in which
service providers interpret and use them (Hilhorst and Schmiemann 2002).
• When we view policies as processes (Mosse 2005) or emergent properties, it is important to invest in their
‘social life’: their history, genesis, meaning and ‘real’ objectives.
• Similarly, paradigms, policies and other ordering principles are never singular in driving practice
o E.g. the instrumentalization of aid (Donini 2012), whereby aid is seen as the playball of politics
o humanitarian action has little to do with its principles but is instrumentalized by competing and
interested actors, including donors, national governments and rebel movements.
• Studying aid from an arena perspective means keeping an open mind about the multiple interests and
drivers of aid and how these work out in everyday practice.
• While paradigms can be seen as a way in which powerful actors impose their understanding of reality, this
does not mean that aid comes about in a top-down manner alone
• On close observation, power needs to be enacted to be effective, and this happens through social
negotiation and by the interference of a large number of actors each of whom have a certain power to
jointly shape the outcomes.
• Aid paradigms can be powerful, but practices of aid come about in more complex ways and by a
multiplicity of actors.
• decisions to help must not be driven by political motives or by discrimination of any kind
• since first Geneva Conventions and the foundation of the RCRC movement
• legal documents:
o United Nations resolution 46/182 about the response to humanitarian crises in 1991;
o the NGO Code of Conduct of 1994
o the Good Humanitarian Donorship initiative
o the preamble of the Core Humanitarian Standard
o the key documents of the World Humanitarian Summit in 2016.
• Exceptionalism is at the heart of this classic paradigm, perhaps even more than the principles.
o A strict separation between crisis and normality
o Humanitarian aid clearly belongs in the realm of crisis and exceptionality, serving as a temporary
stop-gap for needs triggered by a specific crisis (Calhoun 2010).
• the space paradigm has been very dominant in humanitarian discussions
• criticism
o aid deviated from its self-declared norms
o ‘empire’ of humanitarian aid: the importance of local responders, and then continued to focus on
the core of international humanitarians of the Global North
• humanitarian aid as a system
o UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) at the top
o second layer consisting of UN agencies, INGOs and the Red Cross/Red Crescent movement
o A third layer might be added representing national-level aid providers
o The foundation of the system : humanitarian principles.
§ humanitarian principles as a means of gaining secure access to people in need.
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§ strict neutrality, isolation and the highly protective measures associated with fortified aid
compounds (Duffield 2010) are necessary.
o quality mechanisms:
§ ALNAP
§ Sphere
§ HAP
§ People in Aid
• National authorities and other local institutions are rendered invisible in classical humanitarianism. Where
they enter into the analysis, they are treated with mistrust or with a preconceived idea that they require
capacity building
• since the 1990s: humanitarian international system started to engage with local institutions in the
framework of capacity building.
o Capacity building : a terrible term. conveys a non-agentive infrastructure that gets built up by
outside forces.
o it always seems to depict local responders for what they are missing, rather than recognizing their
specific strengths, thus reinforcing existing power relations in the process
o it’s just for creating administratively and financially sound partners that can abide by required
reporting mechanisms (Stephen 2017).
o Finally, the term capacity building misses out on the possibilities of mutuality or capacity sharing
where different partners learn from each other’s strengths.
• In classic humanitarianism, the recipients of aid are typically depicted as victims. In everyday practice,
however, they are often seen as potential cheats.
• Aid is delivered on the basis of mistrust of the society in which it operates and the local providers of aid
and the aid recipients must be kept under close surveillance.
Resilience humanitarianism
• The resilience paradigm rests on the notion that people, communities and societies (can) have the capacity to adapt
to or spring back from tragic life events and disasters.
• Resilience humanitarianism began in the realm of disaster relief, whereby the resilience of local people and
communities and the importance of local response mechanisms became the core of the Hyogo Framework for
Action in 2004.
• resilience reflects changing insights and the growing national capacity for responding to disaster. -> international
community foresees cannot continue to intervene in the rapidly growing number of disasters caused by climate
change
• resilience humanitarianism has spilled over to conflict areas and refugees.
• ‘the resilience-dividend’: crisis response is much more effective and cost-efficient when it takes into account
people’s capacity to respond, adapt and bounce back (Rodin 2014).
• Today’s ‘policy speak’ builds on continuity between crisis and normality
o Crisis as the new normality -> climate change and other factors have resulted in semi-permanent crises
• 2016 World Humanitarian Summit: proclaimed the need to bridge humanitarian action to development and to
peacebuilding and the resolution of crisis (Ban 2016). Similarly, Global Compact on Refugees of June 2018 (final
draft) can be seen as a game changer in the shift from classic to resilience humanitarianism
• The role of state:
o A renewed appreciation of state control of humanitarian responses
o a renewed respect for the role of the state in relation to the humanitarian endeavor
o Host governments of refugee flows play more visible roles
o In cases of open conflict, the role of the state continues to be highly problematic
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o Resilience humanitarianism fits within this complexity of (neoliberal) forms of governance that decentralize
the state’s governance functions in favour of non-state or private actors. However, the consequence of this
is that the responsibility of the state to protect its citizens gets increasingly blurred and backgrounded
• The perception of crisis-affected populations is also changing
o ‘beneficiary’ à ‘survivor,’ ‘first responder’ or even ‘client
• To some extent, the paradigms may be seen to apply to different conditions of crises. Dunantist approaches are
especially visible in high-intensity conflict scenarios, whereas resilience approaches increasingly take over
humanitarianism in refugee care, fragile settings and disasters triggered by natural hazards
• conflicts and disasters are breakpoints of social order, but they are also marked by processes of continuity
and reordering, or the creation of new institutions and linkages
• Conflict does not operate according to a single logic, and its drivers, interests and practices are redefined
by actors creating their own localized and largely unintended conflict dynamics of varying intensity
(Kalyvas 2006).
• Crises are the outcome of conditions that build up over long periods of time, and the transition to
normality is also often marked by long periods of ‘no war no peace’ situations (Richards 2005). Violence
and predatory behaviour may continue long after war is formally over (Keen 2001).
• The tendency of aid and international relations more generally to seek boundaries between normality and
exceptionalism has partly been challenged by the resilience paradigm
• Current insights reveal that (protracted) conflict situations are often characterized by multiple normative systems
and hybrid institutions. . Many of these institutions are multifaceted, and their contributions to conflict and to
peace are often entangled.
• The entangled, multifaceted nature of institutions is also obvious in the economy.
o the economies of survival during crises: People hold on to normality as much as they can and continue
planting their fields and trading their products. War and survive
o economies are deeply intertwined, and most activities are multifaceted, creating new forms of economic
life
o classic humanitarianism would focus on the linkages between the economy and the conflict—seeking to
deliver aid without reinforcing these institutions.
o Resilience humanitarianism tends to build on the survival economy and people’s resilience, but may be
blind to the economic logics of the conflict, and risks of exploitation and abuse of people’s vulnerability
o What both paradigms have in common is that aid agencies have the tendency to place themselves outside
of the complex institutional realities in the area of intervention
• Aid interlocks with social, economic and political processes in society, co-shaping local institutions and institutional
transformation processes by working through, competing with or reinforcing them (Serrano 2012)
• Humanitarian politics concern diplomacy and advocacy to convince parties to respect international
humanitarian law and to grant humanitarian actors unrestricted access to people in need.
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• Humanitarian aid is also subject to geopolitics and the politics of parties that instrumentalize aid to
advance their interests
• NGOs are deeply involved in politics of legitimation
o Finding legitimation as an NGO is a complex endeavour that involves the successful delivery of four
sequential key messages:
§ 1. there is an emergency that requires urgent action
§ 2. the affected communities cannot cope with the emergency by themselves
§ 3. the NGO has the required capability to deal with the crisis for the sake of the
immediately affected.
§ 4. the NGO has no self-interest in this endeavour.
• victimcy and ignorancy in aid arena:
o a tactical convolution where both parties are equally interested in representing the recipients as
needy.
o crisis-affected people use their tactical agency to navigate their environment and figure out what
makes them eligible for receiving aid
o aid providers have a similar interest in foregrounding the victimized properties of the people they
work for
o The victimcy of aid seekers is thus coupled to what may be called the ignorancy of aid providers
(Hilhorst 2016), creating a legitimate and comforting image of guardian angels coming to the
rescue of people in distress.
Conclusion
• The strict exceptionalism of classical humanitarianism has given way to a breakthrough of the binary
between exception and normality in resilience humanitarianism.
o In this paradigm, humanitarian agencies are no longer the sole centre of the humanitarian universe
o local institutions and crisis-affected populations have flipped from invisibility to visibility and from
depreciation to appreciation
• Paradigms of aid can be seen to provide a logic to aid that recombines selective understandings of reality
in more or less coherent stories that aid tells about itself.
• humanitarianism as an arena in which actors socially negotiate policies and practices of aid
• resilience paradigm
o more compatible with the social realities of crisis
o focus on the continuum between crisis and normality, and its portrayal of the humanitarian system
as an ecosystem
o However, the resilience paradigm is as much based on selective understandings, foregrounding
particular properties of social realities, while ignoring others. Equally, it consists of a set of ill-
tested assumptions that seem to reduce the multiplicity of social reality to a singular discourse.
• Crises are marked by continuity and discontinuity, and aid needs to grapple with these multiple faces of
crises. Instead, classical and resilience paradigms have the tendency to overly focus on one of the faces
of crises: classical humanitarianism focuses on the discontinuities, disruption and the need for outside
assistance, whereas resilience humanitarianism seeks continuity in rendering affected populations
primarily responsible for their own survival
• classical and resilience humanitarianism both have the tendency to underestimate the relational and
negotiated nature of aid. they fail to see the humanitarian’s own role in shaping the realities in which they
operate
• ‘victimcy’ and ‘ignorancy’: the article shows how representations of victims as passive recipients of aid is
an essential part of the aid game and a display of tactical agency on the sides of recipients and aid
providers to ensure the perpetuation of the aid relation.
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Mosel, I. and Levine, S. (2014). Remaking the case for linking relief, rehabilitation and development. How LRRD can
become a practically useful concept for assistance in difficult places. HPG-ODI, available at
https://www.odi.org/sites/odi.org.uk/files/odi-assets/publications-opinion-files/8882.pdf.
See p.22
Topics Today
• REBUILDING RECONSIDERED: Linking Relief and development: as part of the cross sectional issues.
• Today
o Refoundational Times
o Peace agreements / Peacebuilding
o Many tasks: Many actors need to support each other on a continuous basis
o LRRD
o Resilience (as the new name for LRRD)
o PRODERE program in Guatemala as practical example
Rebuilding Reconsidered
• (Re-)Foundational Times (Wilson): Rebuilding a society & social contract (Rousseau, but also Alex de
Waal’s political contract to prevent famine, see also chapters in Yanocoupoulos) & actually establish laws
• Infinite Challenges & Different stages
• Each challenge in fact deserves a separate study or class. Examples:
o Moral reconstruction and trauma (can take generations to rebuild)
o Sanctions (before & after)
o Arms transfer (also higher crime rates)
o Aids (also weakened health system, Congo)
o Economic reconstruction
o Political democracy
o Infrastructure
o Etc. (see below)
• Question remains: where can outsiders (intervenors) help most effectively?
• Osler Hampson discusses the elements of the terms of settlement (e.g., all parties need to be involved,
power-sharing), as well as tasks & dilemmas for third parties:
o demobilization, restructuring
o (self-)enforcement (benefits of peace),
o continued mediation and re-negotiation,
o establishing norms (armed forces, police, judiciary and legal system) However, do justice and
peace go hand in hand?
o Proxy governance (transitional government or interim administration)
• By sustaining a process of mediation, negotiation, and assistance with the subsequent implementation of
the peace settlement, third parties can help bring an end to military conflict and lay the basis for a durable
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settlement that advance the process of national reconciliation in divided societies. The challenge is to
cultivate ripeness. Third parties can help sustain the commitment and cooperation of the disputing parties
in the overall peacemaking and peace-building process.
• Settlements that fail have generally been “orphaned,” because third parties either failed to remain fully
engaged in implementing the settlement or were unable to muster the requisite level of resources, both
economic and political, to build the foundations for a secure settlement.
• This often happens when the international “spotlight is turned off”.
• Third parties need other third parties if they are to work efficiently and effectively in nurturing the
conditions for peace. No single third party has the resources or leverage to make the peace process work.
Great powers need the local support of a country’s neighbors. Regional actors and groups need the
assistance of sub-regional groups. Governments and international organizations also require the active
assistance and involvement of NGOS and agencies, particularly during implementation of the agreement.
• Pos. role of outsiders (process factors):
o Peacebuilding & dev. need to go together
o Take a long time frame for rebuilding
o Division of labor between actors (joint strategy)
o Informal policy dialogue & formal performance criteria
o National reconciliation
§ Solve specific problems to prevent “domination”
§ Increase opportunities for participation by civil society
• However, both El Bushra and Goodhand
o still have an outsiders perspective
o insufficiently tell how actual implementation (e.g., priority setting) takes place
o Don’t tell enough about participation
o First steps, to study a situation where all individual topics require more attention simultaneously.
What is relief?
• Objective: saving lives & alleviating human suffering (& sometimes human dignity is also included)
• Principles: humanity, impartiality, neutrality, independence
What is development?
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The gap
Clashing discourses?
• There are two very distinct sets of languages, that separate development and emergency. So if you make a
development proposal, everything is brilliant [...] we talk about the strengths of communities,their ability to
cope, their ability to manage, the opportunity that working together will bring [...] If you read an emergency
proposal, the community is weak and vulnerable (NGO country director, April 2013)
Ethiopia
• "[E]ven if there is rain they would still need humanitarian assistance [...] The area needs more of a sustainable
response than just one year or very short-term response. They have critical water shortages, which is also a
problem for the pasture [...] Most of them, about 70%, are pastoralists, so completely dependent on water”.
(Humanitarian NGO programme assistant)
• “If you're working with the community and [they] say 'You know, this water point development is all good,
but do you know that the crops just failed?', [you can't just answer] 'Yes but we only do development,
so...sorry'.”(Development NGO country director, April 2013)
Resilience
• Nowadays, LRRD as a concept is slowly being replaced by resilience, which is an even broader concept,
because it also includes preparedness.
• The concept of resilience is old, it already recéived attention in ecology and psychoogy,
• It especially came to the fore with int. climate change policy:
o Hyogo Protocoll
o Kyoto Framework for action on climate change
o Sendai Framework for action on climate change
• The 2016 WHS also promoted resilience for war-torn societies
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Guatemala example
• Somewhat paradoxicially, there are programs that linked dev. and relief succesfully, e.g.,
o The UNOPS „Prodere Program in Guatemala:
§ Central American Peace-agreement(s) and cooperation
§ Role of Italy (christian democrats) w. fin. support
§ Enough money, long term, sound methodology (combination of hard relief good and „soft“
development bodies (e.g., with local Human Rights (passport, land titles, ec. activities, and
health)
§ UNDP failed in follow-up strategy development, bc. it did not want to support UNOPS
Lecture 10
Needs assessment is essential for programme planning, monitoring and evaluation, and accountability. They help
organizations to identify and measure the humanitarian needs of a disaster-affected community, and answer the question:
‘What assistance do disaster-affected communities need?’, than enable the organization to make good decisions about how
to allocate resources and gather more resources to meet the needs of the disaster-affected community.
In this regard, The Good Enough Guide was written for for field staff carrying out assessments in the early days and weeks
following a disaster. It is especially aimed at national project managers and their teams. The name ‘good enough’ means
choosing a simple solution, because in an emergency response, a quick and simple approach to needs assessment may be
the only practical possibility.
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• Basic principles of needs assessment
o Make the scope of the assessment reflect the size and nature of the crisis
o Produce timely and relevant analysis
o Collect usable data
o Use valid and transparent methods
o Be accountable
o Coordinate with others and share findings
o Make sure you can get enough resources
o Assess local capacities
o Manage community expectations
o Remember that assessment is not just a one-off event: Continue assessment throughout the
emergency.
• STEPS TO A GOOD ENOUGH NEEDS ASSESSMENT
o Step 1: Preparing for an assessment
§ Before the emergency
• Make sure your organization has assessment procedures that fit with its
contingency plans and programme planning
• check and be ready to mobilize the staff and other resources that you will need to
implement the assessment
• Make sure you know how to get an assessment started in your organization
§ During and after the emergency
• define your assessment through four questions:
• 1. Should your organization intervene, and what value will it add to the response?
• 2. What should the nature, scale and details of your intervention be?
• 3. How should you prioritize and allocate resources strategically?
• 4. What practical actions should the programme design and planning involve?
o Step 2: Designing your assessment
§ Get the basic facts
• 1. Where: locations
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• 2. Who: groups most in need of humanitarian assistance and/or most vulnerable.
• 3. What: sectors that require immediate action and/ or ongoing attention.
§ Engage stakeholders
§ Support specific decisions
§ Be realistic
§ Review secondary data
§ Collect primary data if necessary
§ Keep the process going
o Step 3: Implementing your assessment
• remain flexible and be ready to update the assessment to suit new circumstances
• your assessment does not have to be perfect to be useful.
• Use a standardized, transparent and clearly documented process; follow
recognized data collection methods; use widely accepted terms from the
humanitarian sector; and apply relevant technical standards and indicators.
§ Consultation and accountability
• Carrying out a stakeholder analysis: identify and make an overview of all the
stakeholders or interest groups associated with this assessment and how they may
be influenced by the outcome.
• Engage these stakeholders as early as possible, and communicate with them
frequently throughout the process
• The assessment should try to represent all groups of the affected population,
especially those who may be vulnerable.
§ Who is vulnerable?
• consult host communities
•
§ The assessment team
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• Choose team members who have the skills and experience you require to respond
to this particular disaster
• If possible, team members should be staff recruited specifically for the assessment,
or existing staff who are seconded to the team.
• Based on the assessment plan, you should agree on standard operating procedures
(SOPs) with key stakeholders.
§ Collecting data
• A secondary data review is the first step
• collect primary data only if necessary
o Step 4: Analysing your data
• Analysis should start as soon as you begin to receive data (secondary or primary)
and continue as long as you are receiving new data
• your analysis should contribute to a shared picture of the situation that can be used
by all humanitarian actors
• your analysis should also identify gaps in capacity: human resources, aid materials,
logistics capabilities, coping strategies, etc.
§ Checking your findings
• Validation
•
o Step 5: Sharing your findings
§ Make your findings available to:
• colleagues (within your organization);
• peers (in other organizations); • coordinators (government, cluster or other);
• local and national authorities; and
• affected communities.
§ Writing your report
• The report must include three major components:
o 1. findings (including background context);
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o 2. analysis of those findings to explain what is happening; and
o 3. methodology for how you collected your data and carried out your
analysis.
• Be user-friendly. Write as little as possible, but as much as you need to
communicate your findings
• You should share your methodology in your report, and state your level of
confidence in your findings.
§ Presenting your findings
• meets the expectations and requirements of the target audience
• use the sharing process to start discussions with key stakeholders.
• be aware of security and safety concerns
§ Helping with decision-making
• Answer the questions that decision-makers will have, such as:
o How are pre-crisis vulnerabilities likely to be affected by the disaster?
o What is known about the impact of similar disasters or crises in the region
in the past?
o What does this tell us about the potential evolution of the disaster?
o What coping strategies are in place and how can these be supported?
o What factors or drivers could contribute to worsening conditions?
o Is there a need for external assistance, and what are the appropriate
responses?
o What are the potential transition and/or exit strategies?
James, E. Managing Humanitarian Relief. An Operational Guide for NGOs, pp. 119-130.
This chapter provide an overview of how assessments can be used in emergencies. It looks at assessments on two levels,
general and programme-specific, as well as presenting different methods that are available.
Assessment planning
Step 1 Analyse initial sources of information such as local staff, beneficiaries, local government, other NGOs, the UN donors,
Journals, books and reports, maps and photos.
Quantitative methods
• Questionnaires
• Knowledge attitudes and practices surveys
Qualitative methods
• An important element of qualitative methods is participation among the different stakeholders involved
in the assessment
• Semi-structured interviews
• Focus group discussions (FGOs)
• Observation
• Auto-diagnosis
o involves a four-stage process:
§ identification of the problem,
§ planning together,
§ implementing
§ evaluating the results
• Group activities
• Participatory methods
o Participatory rural appraisal (PRA)
§ focus on nontraditional roles (e.g. women).
§ main PRA techniques include:
• Direct observation
• Semi-structured interviews, FGD and conversations
• People being asked to give an oral history of a place or situation ranking and scoring
(preference, pair-wise or direct scoring)
• Diagram and map making
§ not realistic to do (take 6-12 months)
o participatory learning and action (PLA)
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This Week
• Needs Assessement
o The good enough guides
• Video from the Assessment Capacities Project (ACAPS): https://www.acaps.org/resources/elearning/5
• Uganda Research
• DR Congo Study on Local Perceptions of hum. Organizations
Preparing
Designing
Implementing
• p. 18
• You will need to improvise, but the more structured you work and the better your knowledge of Needs
Assessment (and M& E in general), the better/more structured you can improvise. (This could have been
higlighted more in the „Needs Assessment“ Good Enough Guide).
Analysing
Sharing
• Get feedback
o Peer reviews
o Participant feedback
o Paymasters
• Publication/Sharing: Flexibly adjust to the information and decision-making needs of your audience
• Start again: use the last evaluation(s) in a new evaluation cycle
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Shortcomings
• Lack of resources
• Politics & Impact
• Use common sense, while improvising continuously (therefore you need good planning). This should have
been indicated in more detail.
Conclusions
Lecture 11
Required Reading:
CHS Alliance (Ed.) (2014) Core Humanitarian Standard on Quality and Accountability, available at
https://corehumanitarianstandard.org/files/files/CHS%20in%20English%20-%20book%20for%20printing.pdf.
See p.30
James, E. Managing Humanitarian Relief. An Operational Guide for NGOs, pp. 173-195.
this chapter is to outline ways to effectively manage human resources at the field level.
HRM systems
Basic needs
Planning
• Record-keeping
• Staff policy manuals
o Only in rare cases can a manual from the NGO's HQ be applied to field programmes, because of
different laws, cultures and local conditions
• Government regulations
o Vacancy notices, record-keeping, taxation, work hours, holiday leave and benefits are just some
of the things that might be regulated by law
Types of staff
• Volunteers
• National employees (local staff): should not be hired on the basis of language skills alone
• International employees ( expatriate staff)
o three types of relief workers: missionaries, mercenaries and madmen.
o 3 phrase of career development of relief workers:
§ Altruistic: naive, phase, usually during the first years
§ brash and driven but also possibly dysfunctional and political
§ caring and have a fuller understanding of the constraints and reality of the work they do
§
TODAY
Alternatives to hiring
• Temporary staff
o temps can be more entrepreneurial
o temps are less socialized into the org (pos/neg)
• Contractors (form of privatization)
o issues of having good contracts (princ/agent)
o can be used as downsizing: growth outside the books, but whether it enhances capacity is something else
o mission contracting (DOE example), see p. 56
• Borrowing people (danger of dumping)
o task force
o detailing
o ask other (part of the) org, e.g., staff offices
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o increase in power struggles
• We have not talked about new performance systems such as 160 degree feedback. More people from different
levels evaluate each other
People in Aid
IMPROVEMENT INITIATIVES?
• Discuss relationships and common short-comings with other improvement tools: SPHERE, ALNAP, HAP, People in
Aid, GHD
• Commonalities:
o After Rwanda
o Transparency/Understanding processes/Progr. Mgmt
o Cooperative endeavors
o Differ in their enforcement
o Useful in assessment/design and evaluation (Mary Anderson’s Do no Harm is also sometimes called a
needs assessment / design tool)
People in Aid
• People in Aid is one of several inter-agency initiatives which came into being in the 1990ties
• These initiatives provide the sector with tools to improve quality, accountability, performance and active learning
• Code of good practice
• (Another form of needs assessment)
• Precursor of the Core Humanitarian Standard (CHS)
• People in Aid is an international network of relief and development agencies. It provides support to agencies
committed to improving their human resource management by providing tools such as the People in Aid Code of
Good Practice
• „One of the central factors in the success of humanitarian action has been the dedication of staff - ordinary people
doing extraordinary things, despite working in disenabling bureaucracies“
(Annual review 2003: Active Learning Network for Accountability and Performance in Humanitarioan Action,
ALNAP)
• People in Aid code is an initiative to ensure quality in the management of personnel working in aid organizations
• Support and management of staff is critical success factor in delivering a proper mission
• It is an important part to improve human resource management in the relief and development sector
• It is a quality tool which aims to ensure accountability to various stakeholders
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• It is a framework to assess and improve human resource management
Background
• People in Aid encourages improvements in the way staff (national and international) are managed and supported
• People in Aid consists of seven principles
• Accountability to stakeholders (donors and beneficiaries) should also include the accountability towards staff and
volunteers
• The Code was drawn between 1995 and 1997 for Irish and British NGOs
• Then: in the UN-familiy and continental Europe
• Nowadays: CHS
• Policies and practices should aim to attract and select diverse workforce
• Why? Because it has significantly influence on effectiveness in the fulfilment of objectives
• Indicators:
o Policies and procedures should outline how staff should be recruited and selected
o Recruitment should aim to pool suitable and qualified personnel
o Selection process should be fair and transparent
o Appropriate documentation should be maintained regarding the selection process
o Effectiveness and fairness of the recruitment process should be monitored
• Security, good health and safety of staff should be a prime responsibility of an organisation
• Indicators:
o Written policies should be available to staff on security, individual health, care and support, health and
safety
o Assessment on security, travel and health risks specific to mission should be reviewed constantly
o Staff clearance before assignment (incl. briefing)
o Security plans should be provided
o Records should be maintained of work-related injuries, sickness and accidents (to reduce future risk to
staff)
o Workplans should not require more hours work than set out in the contract
o De-briefing and / or exit interviews at the end of contract
• It is a process through which any organisation can thoroughly review their human resource management
• Recognition of (staff) efforts for improvement and support of personnel
• Donors might see evidence for commitment to strengthening international capacity and systems to improve
quality of aid delivery
• Support of management structures can lead to more effective programme work
• Beneficiaries will have the assurance that an organisation is monitoring the impact and delivery of any
programme
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• It is a framework for analysis: Code provides comprehensive overview of human resources issues affecting
agencies
• Tries to identify gaps during implantation (in relation to policies and practices)
• Categorisation of 7 principles (according to key issues)
• Stakeholder participation: staff will be involved in the process
• ALNAP: Active Learning Network for Accountability and Performance in Humanitarian Action is a unique active-
learning network for improving quality and accountability of H.A.
• HAP: Humanitarian Accountablity Partnership International set up in 2003 to develop, implement and monitor
accountability principles, and ensure compliance through collective self regulation
• People in Aid promotes good practice in human resource management
• The Sphere Project: works to improve the quality, effectiveness and accountability of disaster response through
the understanding and use of the Humanitarian Charter, Minimum Standards and key indicators
Lecture 12
Required Reading:
Goodhand, J. Chapter 12: ‘Working ‘in’ and ‘on’ War,’ pp. 280-311, in Yanacopulos and Hanlon, Civil War, Civil Peace.
See p.10
Hanlon, J., H. Yanacopulos ‘Conclusion: Understanding as a Guide to Action’ pp. 314-320, in Yanacopulos and Hanlon, Civil War,
Civil Peace.
See p.12
Krause, M. (2014) Conclusion, pp.168-176. The good project
See p.19
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*** PPT & NOTES***
Jonathan Goodhand (2005) “Working ‘in’ and ‘on’ war”, p. 280-313, in Yanacopulos and Hanlon. Civil War, Civil Peace
• Add cash-based aid to relief (food, watsan, shelter, medicine)
• No hierarchy
• Categories merge into one another; their balance and focus shifts over time
• Conflict proofing and ‘do no harm’ are two sides of the same coin
• Conflict proofing: question of security for the ‘internal’ environment
• ‘Do no harm’ is concerned with the ‘external environment’
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• Your position is the result of the interplay between your proclaimed position and how others perceive you.
• There is no such thing as a non-impact
• Bring a sense of responsibility and a sense of proportion
o Recognize the potential for an intervention to do harm and to do good
• Conduct a thorough conflict assessment
• Develop the skills to predict, categorize and quantify the kinds of harms that might be caused
o Impact can happen on the individual, institutional and structural level
o Be sensitive to the potential of ‘negative externalities’
• Relief aid and possible negative effects:
o Humanitarian aid can be ‘taxed’ by warring parties
o Aid can free up domestic resources for war making
o Relief can instil a false sense of security among the victims of war
o Aid relief operations can serve as a smokescreen for inaction on other fronts by donor government
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• Your are building probabilities rather than uncertainties
• Government-led peace processes important for civil society
• Combine bottom-up and top-down approaches
• Structural and institutional change takes time
• Be aware of windows of opportunity
• Recognize tensions and trade-offs involved in juggling multiple objectives
• Building capacities through peacebuilding projects = giving up a position of neutrality towards one of solidarity ?
• Advocacy and media involvement to reach more people and influence important people
Organizational Challenges
Hanlon/Yanacopulos (2005) “Conclusion”, p. 314-20 in Yanacopulos and Hanlon. Civil War, Civil Peace
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o Climate change & environmental decline
o Population growth
o ABC (Atomic, Biological and Chemical) weapon threat has not disappeared
o See humanitarian futures paper and the ODI „Time to Let Go“ paper (recommended literature)
IMPROVEMENT INITIATIVES?
• Discuss relationships and common short-comings with other improvement tools: SPHERE, ALNAP, HAP,
People in Aid, GHDI, and CHS
• Commonalities:
o Originally after Rwanda
o Transparency/Understanding processes/Progr. Mgmt
o Cooperative endeavors
o Differ in their enforcement
o Useful in assessment/design and evaluation (Mary Anderson’s Do no Harm is also sometimes
called an assessment/design tool)
• 2005 UN Reform
o Cluster Approach;
o Central Emergency Response Fund;
o Common Humanitarian Fund/Pooled Fund at the country level;
• 2011 “L3” Disasters
• Overall improvement, but hum. organizations mainly exchange information, “They don’t explain what is
happening in their black box”.
• Recently, CHS and WHS (e.g., localization, cash.based assistance, resilience)
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