Humanitarian aid agencies have relied primarily on acceptance as their primary risk, or security, management strategy for well over a decade. Evidence suggests, however, that this strategy has become ineffective, as the number of targeted attacks against humanitarian aid workers has been steadily increasing over the past two decades. Despite the urgency of the situation, aid agencies have struggled to effectively implement new strategies and still rely primarily on acceptance as a mitigating strategy. This article examines the limitations of acceptance as practiced by humanitarian aid agencies as a strategy against targeted attacks and the challenges in adopting new strategies. The article uses Cultural Theory to explain these limitations a...
The securitization framework has greatly improved empirical analysis of security threats. Yet, it co...
This thesis seeks to understand the phenomenon of attacks against humanitarian workers by asking: wh...
This dissertation theoretically explains the behaviour of international humanitarian organisations v...
Humanitarian aid agencies have relied primarily on acceptance as their primary risk, or security, ma...
Deminers and other humanitarian-aid workers around the world, though previously viewed as off-limits...
Since the end of the Cold War, a significant number of aid workers have been assaulted and killed, p...
When considering the increasing frequency with which humanitarian aid workers are being threatened, ...
The central focus of this thesis is the security situation of humanitarian personnel working in the ...
This article presents the results of an exploratory study into aid agencies’ use of technologies for...
Contemporary societies have been characterized as risk societies. While considerable research on ind...
The objective of the thesis is to study, through a critical constructivist analysis, the conception ...
This dissertation explores the construction of humanitarian insecurity as a social problem; more par...
Organizations responding to humanitarian crises often have different organizational cultures and obs...
Doctor of PhilosophySecurity Studies Interdepartmental ProgramEmizet F. KisanganiAttacks against non...
Marketization of the humanitarian system and the financial independence is thought to have an impact...
The securitization framework has greatly improved empirical analysis of security threats. Yet, it co...
This thesis seeks to understand the phenomenon of attacks against humanitarian workers by asking: wh...
This dissertation theoretically explains the behaviour of international humanitarian organisations v...
Humanitarian aid agencies have relied primarily on acceptance as their primary risk, or security, ma...
Deminers and other humanitarian-aid workers around the world, though previously viewed as off-limits...
Since the end of the Cold War, a significant number of aid workers have been assaulted and killed, p...
When considering the increasing frequency with which humanitarian aid workers are being threatened, ...
The central focus of this thesis is the security situation of humanitarian personnel working in the ...
This article presents the results of an exploratory study into aid agencies’ use of technologies for...
Contemporary societies have been characterized as risk societies. While considerable research on ind...
The objective of the thesis is to study, through a critical constructivist analysis, the conception ...
This dissertation explores the construction of humanitarian insecurity as a social problem; more par...
Organizations responding to humanitarian crises often have different organizational cultures and obs...
Doctor of PhilosophySecurity Studies Interdepartmental ProgramEmizet F. KisanganiAttacks against non...
Marketization of the humanitarian system and the financial independence is thought to have an impact...
The securitization framework has greatly improved empirical analysis of security threats. Yet, it co...
This thesis seeks to understand the phenomenon of attacks against humanitarian workers by asking: wh...
This dissertation theoretically explains the behaviour of international humanitarian organisations v...