A shrinking humanitarian space? Dr Sara Pantuliano October 2015
Definition of ‘humanitarian space’ Agency centred definition: ability of agencies to evaluate and respond to needs, monitor programmes and dialogue with the people vs People centred definition: people’s ability to access both assistance and protection In reality humanitarian space entails complex negotiations with military, political and legal actors on an ongoing basis
Is humanitarian space shrinking? Common narrative: things are getting worse Politicisation of aid is increasing (9/11) More aid worker attacks Access more difficult to establish But a look at the history reveals that there has been no past ‘golden age’ of humanitarian action
Expansion of agency space More aid organisations More aid workers More money Humanitarian action has always been difficult and dangerous in situations of active conflict Targeting of aid as a result of politics of humanitarian rejection, the underlying causes of which need to be understood
External challenges Scrutiny is often on external players or factors, e.g.: national governments stabilisation operations UN integrated missions counter-terrorism legislation
Humanitarian system itself needs greater scrutiny Humanitarian organisations represent a relatively powerful and well resourced group Power highly concentrated in the hands of a core group of UN agencies and international NGOs ‘Humanitarian cartel’ 2008: 6 INGOs combined annual spending of $1.7 bn and 60% of NGO staffing presence 2012: 5 INGOs combined annual spending of 38% of total 2014: ‘Big Five’ (0.1% of humanitarian NGOs worldwide) still account for 31% of total annual NGO expenditure
Evolving humanitarian space Impression of the humanitarian sector as a predominantly Western construct Aid agencies driven by competing priorities and imperatives, not just a commitment to principles and best practice The space has increased and so have the needs of people affected by disaster and conflict Established system must evolve and involve – not isolate – new players. China has a role to play!
A shrinking humanitarian space? Dr Sara Pantuliano October 2015