This paper aims to contribute to debates about humanitarian governance and insecurity in post-conflict situations. It takes the case of South Sudan to explore the relations between humanitarian agencies, the international community, and local authorities, and the ways international and local forms of power become interrelated and contested, and to what effect. The paper is based on eight months of ethnographic research in various locations in South Sudan between 2011 and 2013, in which experiences with and approaches to insecurity among humanitarian aid actors were studied. The research found that many security threats can be understood in relation to the everyday practices of negotiating and maintaining humanitarian access. Perceiving this...
Approximately 4.75 billion USD of international aid money was spent in South Sudan between 2012 and ...
The objective of this article is to present the International Relations swing towards an ethnocentri...
This study argues that humanitarian interventions are not undertaken merely to alleviate the sufferi...
This paper aims to contribute to debates about humanitarian governance and insecurity in post-confli...
This dissertation is based on two years of field research in Sudan, in Khartoum; the three capitals ...
This briefing paper summarises shifts in international engagement in South Sudan from humanitarian a...
Fifty-four years since independence, eleven years of peace, two civil wars, one complex humanitarian...
This article explores how the humanitarian presence and programs in the disputed border area of Abye...
In 2005, the Government of Sudan and the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement / Army concluded a peace...
More than five million people in South Sudan are currently in urgent need of humanitarian aid, with ...
This thesis is concerned with the long-term failure of significant aid investments to improve the ci...
External actors have been engaged in what is now South Sudan from the colonial era through to the pr...
The main objective of this paper is to show the general character of the impact of aid, and the acti...
This memo summarizes observations and conclusions from the Conflict Research Programme/World Peace F...
This is one of three country case studies (the others being of Kenya and Somalia) that explore the i...
Approximately 4.75 billion USD of international aid money was spent in South Sudan between 2012 and ...
The objective of this article is to present the International Relations swing towards an ethnocentri...
This study argues that humanitarian interventions are not undertaken merely to alleviate the sufferi...
This paper aims to contribute to debates about humanitarian governance and insecurity in post-confli...
This dissertation is based on two years of field research in Sudan, in Khartoum; the three capitals ...
This briefing paper summarises shifts in international engagement in South Sudan from humanitarian a...
Fifty-four years since independence, eleven years of peace, two civil wars, one complex humanitarian...
This article explores how the humanitarian presence and programs in the disputed border area of Abye...
In 2005, the Government of Sudan and the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement / Army concluded a peace...
More than five million people in South Sudan are currently in urgent need of humanitarian aid, with ...
This thesis is concerned with the long-term failure of significant aid investments to improve the ci...
External actors have been engaged in what is now South Sudan from the colonial era through to the pr...
The main objective of this paper is to show the general character of the impact of aid, and the acti...
This memo summarizes observations and conclusions from the Conflict Research Programme/World Peace F...
This is one of three country case studies (the others being of Kenya and Somalia) that explore the i...
Approximately 4.75 billion USD of international aid money was spent in South Sudan between 2012 and ...
The objective of this article is to present the International Relations swing towards an ethnocentri...
This study argues that humanitarian interventions are not undertaken merely to alleviate the sufferi...