The government’s drive to demonstrate progress has made some soldiers hostile to those needing to leave their homes.
Crises lead to change – humanitarians just need to know what to look for. The second in a two-part series exploring how ...
In a country where doing almost anything takes paperwork, red tape has become prohibitive for the million people forced to ...
Limited international action has allowed alleged Emirati involvement in the war to increase, the investigation said, with devastating consequences for civilians, particularly in Darfur, and for ...
Editor’s note: The following article is part of a series of reports exploring the influence of the US Christian nationalist movement on both human rights and sexual and reproductive health access in ...
The World Food Programme still won’t talk about the cyber-attack that exposed sensitive data belonging to a vast share of Gaza’s population. But there are new calls for the agency to open up about its ...
Our editors’ weekly take on humanitarian news, trends, and developments from around the globe. INDIA: Indian authorities have deported thousands of Bangladeshi citizens in the month since Prime ...
The response to the Ebola outbreak in the eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo must be rooted in the country’s local health structures and avoid “asymmetrical” suffering by treating those in state ...
Editor’s note: The Intrepid Humanitarian is an occasional series of dispatches that aims to spotlight the forgotten crises of Caucasia. Last week I made a return to the Dank Continent for the second ...
Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis is the last major medical facility continuing to operate in the southern Gaza Strip. Over more than two and a half years, The New Humanitarian has reported on how the ...
Professor of Urban Design at ABK Stuttgart, and founder-director of FABULOUS URBAN, which builds infrastructure with women’s collectives in Lagos, Enugu, and Nairobi You’ve heard it before. Women and ...