Enduring violence in South Sudan since independence has made seeking safety and protection a priority for local communities, as the government and humanitarians often fail to provide for more than basic needs. New ethnographic research examines how safety is understood from the community perspective, and why a community arms race and ethnicised forms of protection mark a shift away from reliance on external actors
AUTHOR AFFILIATION: Janet Wanjiku Mugo, International Rescue Committee, South Sudan, jwamu8@gmail.co...
With an area of more than one million square miles (2,589,988 square kilometers), Sudan is the large...
For many people in rural South Sudan, the health impacts of COVID-19 have been invisible, in contras...
Humanitarian protection remains inaccessible for the tens of thousands of displaced South Sudanese l...
The struggle for independence in many African countries was aimed at regaining the dignity and respe...
The essence of security is the protection of life and property both of which are important to human ...
Armed, cattle-herding men in Africa are often assumed to be at a relational and spatial distance fro...
This article examines how former Protection of Civilian site (PoCs) residents are staying safe and p...
A Situational Report by Dr. Philip Mwanzia who was a Lecturer at the School of Humanities and Social...
International humanitarian actors and academics continue to struggle to understand armed group condu...
More than five million people in South Sudan are currently in urgent need of humanitarian aid, with ...
According to the Small Arms Survey, there are an estimated 875 million small arms and light weapons ...
Fifty-four years since independence, eleven years of peace, two civil wars, one complex humanitarian...
Since 2003, Sudan’s central government has used proxy forces to slaughter thousands of civilians bel...
Since its independence in 2011, the South Sudanese President Salva Kiir Mayardit (Salva Kiir) has be...
AUTHOR AFFILIATION: Janet Wanjiku Mugo, International Rescue Committee, South Sudan, jwamu8@gmail.co...
With an area of more than one million square miles (2,589,988 square kilometers), Sudan is the large...
For many people in rural South Sudan, the health impacts of COVID-19 have been invisible, in contras...
Humanitarian protection remains inaccessible for the tens of thousands of displaced South Sudanese l...
The struggle for independence in many African countries was aimed at regaining the dignity and respe...
The essence of security is the protection of life and property both of which are important to human ...
Armed, cattle-herding men in Africa are often assumed to be at a relational and spatial distance fro...
This article examines how former Protection of Civilian site (PoCs) residents are staying safe and p...
A Situational Report by Dr. Philip Mwanzia who was a Lecturer at the School of Humanities and Social...
International humanitarian actors and academics continue to struggle to understand armed group condu...
More than five million people in South Sudan are currently in urgent need of humanitarian aid, with ...
According to the Small Arms Survey, there are an estimated 875 million small arms and light weapons ...
Fifty-four years since independence, eleven years of peace, two civil wars, one complex humanitarian...
Since 2003, Sudan’s central government has used proxy forces to slaughter thousands of civilians bel...
Since its independence in 2011, the South Sudanese President Salva Kiir Mayardit (Salva Kiir) has be...
AUTHOR AFFILIATION: Janet Wanjiku Mugo, International Rescue Committee, South Sudan, jwamu8@gmail.co...
With an area of more than one million square miles (2,589,988 square kilometers), Sudan is the large...
For many people in rural South Sudan, the health impacts of COVID-19 have been invisible, in contras...