- Editorial, François Grünewald
- The shared interests which make humanitarianism possible, Michaël Neuman
- How do Sri Lankan aid workers in Vavuniya understand the term ’humanitarian’ and to what extent do they identify with it?, Olivia Collins
- From UNDRO to the Transformative Agenda: 40 years of challenges for the coordination of humanitarian action, François Grünewald
- Environment and conflict in Latin America, Renard Sexton
- Does humanitarian coordination exclude local actors and weaken their capacity?, Andréanne Martel
- Haiti: the limits of the “Aid System”, Jean-Marc Biquet and Catrin Schulte-Hillen
- Humanitarian crises and sustainability sanitation: lessons from Eastern Chad, Anne Delmaire and Julie Patinet
- Bibliography on post-crisis food security
- Events in “Humanitarian Aid on the move” No. 9
Humanitarian Aid on the move No. 9
28/03/2012
“Resilience” – buzzword or useful concept? When we spoke of resilience in 1999, in our report on the famine in Bar El Ghazal, it was not understood by some. This concept from the field of psychology, which describes the capacity of individuals to absorb and survive stress and adversity, was being applied to the living conditions of the inhabitants of the great wetlands of the Nilotic depression in Southern Sudan, one of the harshest environments imaginable [...]