Responsible for 60-80% of response costs and essential for life-saving assistance, supply chains are key to humanitarian impact and need to be recognized.
csis.org: What Has Happened to U.S. Government Capabilities for International Humanitarian Assistance, Disaster Response, and Resilience?
What Has Happened to U.S. Government Capabilities for International Humanitarian Assistance, Disaster Response, and Resilience?
As crises grow more prolonged and frequent, humanitarian aid must shift. A humanitarian reset calls for rethinking how assistance reaches people.
Disasters are growing in frequency and complexity and the private sector's role in improving global humanitarian responses is increasingly important.
Humanitarian aid needs are growing faster than a weakened system can meet, while also changing in nature due to increased climate risks and protracted conflicts. A new approach to aid is required, utilizing blended finance, centring communities, and redistributing resources between humanitarian response and development. Augmenting approaches requires changing the questions aid choices seek to ...
More than 100 million people today are on the run from conflict and disaster, and 340 million are projected to be in need of humanitarian assistance in 2023. Every year, the International Rescue Committee compiles data on the world's most worrying conflicts: the Emergency Watchlist. The Emergency Watchlist is more than a warning — it is a guide on how to avert or minimise those humanitarian ...
In 2026, 239 million people need urgent humanitarian assistance following a 2025 marked by severe cuts to humanitarian operations and a record number of deadly attacks against aid workers. Wars, ...
USNI: Humanitarian Aid, Combat Training Prepare Marines for Deployment in the Outback