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Humanitarian Aid and Intervention: The Challenges of Integration

Introduction to Humanitarian Aid and Intervention: The Challenges of Integration 10/14/04
The idea of humanitarian assistance—delivering medicine, food, and other supplies to relieve suffering and save lives—appears to be a simple one. But there is a debate among humanitarian organizations, official donors, governments, and the UN about the operational approach.

Humanitarianism Sacrificed: Integration's False Promise [Full Text] 09/24/04
In recent years there have been concerted efforts to ensure that the different components of the international response to crisis-affected countries are integrated in pursuit of a stated goal of comprehensive, durable, and just resolution of conflict.
Author(s): Nicolas de Torrenté

Upholding Humanitarian Principles in an Effective Integrated Response [Full Text] 09/24/04
The integration of political, military, and humanitarian action in responding to complex emergencies offers a compelling promise of resolving long-term problems and thereby providing peace and stability to an entire population.
Author(s): Joel R. Charny

An Elusive Quest: Integration in the response to the Afghan Crisis [Full Text] 09/24/04
In the UN humanitarian response in Afghanistan post–September 11 we see a dangerous level of contraction that compromises the application of its basic principles for the sake of pursuing nationbuilding activities in the service of political agendas.
Author(s): Antonio Donini

Understanding Integration from Rwanda to Iraq [Full Text] 09/24/04
In 1994, in the refugee camps of Goma, Zaire, there was widespread manipulation of aid resources by armed groups implicated in the genocide in Rwanda. This experience highlighted a wider concern that, rather than doing good, emergency aid can fuel violence.
Author(s): Joanna Macrae

The Value of Integration: A U.S. Perspective [Full Text] 09/24/04
The integration of humanitarian action into intervention operations, and particularly the inclusion of a military component, carries risks—but none so great as to be worth sacrificing integration on the altar of humanitarian purity.
Author(s): Arthur E. Dewey

Improving the U.S. Government's Humanitarian Response [Full Text] 09/24/04
The Office of U.S. Foreign Disaster Assistance (OFDA) was created in 1964 to provide emergency nonfood humanitarian assistance in response to international crises and disasters, in order to save lives and alleviate human suffering and to reduce the economic impact of those disasters.
Author(s): Anita Menghetti, Jeff Drumtra

Informing the Integration Debate with Recent Experience [Full Text] 09/24/04
The overriding challenge faced by policy-makers in the post–Cold War era is not, as many would have us believe, the achievement of integration of humanitarian action into the prevailing politico-military context. It is rather the protection of its independence.
Author(s): Larry Minear


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The Carnegie Council's flagship publication, Ethics & International Affairs is an interdisciplinary resource for scholars, students, and policy analysts concerned with the moral dimensions of global issues. The journal covers global justice, civil society, democratization, international law, intervention, sanctions, and related topics.

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