Humanitarianism under attack.

Barry Munslow

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

9 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Attacks on humanitarianism are threefold. First, in conflict zones, over the past decade attacks on humanitarian health facilities and personnel are increasingly documented, along with a decline in respect for core humanitarian principles by state and non-state actors, and this will continue. Second, growing instrumentalisation, a failure to adequately fund the sector, antimigrant/refugee populism on the rise and the protracted nature of many crises are provoking a shift away from humanitarian to development healthcare aid over the next decade, intended to keep refugees far away from developed countries by encouraging their integration into immediate neighbouring states. This undermines humanitarian healthcare emergency response capacity. Third, the climate crisis will massively increase humanitarian healthcare needs among the most vulnerable over the next decade and challenge the sector to respond across all its programmes, not least as it absorbs a renewed youthful agency elsewhere in climate protest.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)358-360
Number of pages3
JournalInternational Health
Volume11
Issue number5
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2 Sept 2019

Keywords

  • climate crisis
  • conflict
  • humanitarian health
  • humanitarianism
  • migrant
  • refugee

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