January 19, 2012
Crowded Civil-Military Space:
Evolution of Humanitarian Crises and Response
This roundtable discussion featured Peter
Walker, Director and Professor of Nutrition & Human Security and Antonio
Donini, Senior Research and Instructor, both
from the Feinstein International Center. Walker and Donini presented Feinstein’s research on three broad areas:
1) Working with Complexity
2) Aid and Military Sharing Space
3) Working with the State.
Click here to see the PowerPoint presentation Working with the State.
Click here to see the PowerPoint presentation Perception of Security and Aid.
1) Working with Complexity: How is the
humanitarian enterprise handling the complexity it faces, with more frequent
and more types of crises, competition between and amongst local and
international actors, and differences between state vs non-state humanitarian
approaches?
2) Aid and Military Sharing Space: What does
research suggest about the use of humanitarian and development projects in the
service of counterinsurgency to bring or maintain security in strategically
important environments, and by "winning hearts and minds" undermine
support for radical, insurgent, or terrorist groups?
3) Working with the State: With sovereignty and
nationalism increasingly impacting on the practice of humanitarian action, how
are tensions between “state avoiding” and the “state embracing” agendas
affecting humanitarianism?
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Peter Walker and Antonio Donini from Tufts University Feinstein
International Center talk with Worldvision's Randy Tift in front of
InterAction's memorial to Fallen Colleagues whose lives were cut short
while providing relief and development services around the world."
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