AI Article Synopsis

  • The article introduces a new framework for understanding humanitarian-military relations (HMR) during crises, focusing on how civilian responders interact with armed actors.
  • It emphasizes two main factors: the feelings of crisis-affected populations towards armed actors, and how aligned or misaligned the goals of these civilians and military forces are.
  • The framework is supported by a comprehensive study involving 175 interviews across four different humanitarian situations, including the Ebola outbreak in Congo and the COVID-19 pandemic in the Philippines.

Article Abstract

This article presents a new typology for humanitarian-military relations (HMR). This typology can serve as an analytical framework for assessing, during humanitarian emergencies, how civilian responders can and should engage with armed actors. The typology considers two factors: (1) the nature of crisis-affected population's perceptions of an armed actor, and (2) the extent of alignment of civilian responders' and armed actors' interests and objectives. This typology is empirically rooted in an in-depth analysis of HMR across four humanitarian response contexts: (1) the Kivu Ebola Epidemic in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, (2) the Rukban forced displacement crisis along the Jordan-Syria border, (3) the Taal volcano eruption in the Philippines, and (4) the COVID-19 pandemic in the Philippines. The analysis presented in this article is based on 175 qualitative interviews conducted with civilian responders, armed actors, and crisis-affected individuals across these contexts.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9951150PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s41018-023-00134-5DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • The article introduces a new framework for understanding humanitarian-military relations (HMR) during crises, focusing on how civilian responders interact with armed actors.
  • It emphasizes two main factors: the feelings of crisis-affected populations towards armed actors, and how aligned or misaligned the goals of these civilians and military forces are.
  • The framework is supported by a comprehensive study involving 175 interviews across four different humanitarian situations, including the Ebola outbreak in Congo and the COVID-19 pandemic in the Philippines.
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