Imperfect relief: Challenges to the impartiality and identity of humanitarian action

IF 0.6 4区 社会学 Q2 LAW International Review of the Red Cross Pub Date : 2024-03-25 DOI:10.1017/s1816383124000092
Marc DuBois, Sean Healy
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Abstract

One of the four core humanitarian principles, impartiality's substantive ethical and deeply operational nature directs aid agencies to seek and deliver aid on the basis of non-discrimination and in proportion to the needs of crisis-affected people. Designed to operationalize the principle of humanity, impartiality is challenged by a plethora of external factors, such as the instrumentalization of aid, bureaucratic restriction, obstruction by States or non-State armed groups, and insecurity. Less visible and less examined are factors internal to aid agencies or the sector as a whole. Based on a desk review of the literature and the authors’ experience working with Médecins Sans Frontières, this article explores shortcomings in how the humanitarian sector understands and operationalizes impartiality, placing the focus on these internal factors. Beginning with the definition of impartiality, the article focuses on inadequacies in the practice of impartiality's twin pillars: non-discrimination and proportionality in the delivery of aid. Key conclusions include the necessity of an active rather than passive approach to non-discrimination, and the need for greater commitment to proportionality. In extending this analysis, the article looks more deeply at how aid organizations approach the humanitarian principles, identifying shortcomings in the way that the sector operationalizes, engages with and evaluates those principles. Given the sector's limited inclusion of or accountability towards people in crisis, its exercise of impartiality seems particularly problematic in relation to its power to decide the who and what of aid delivery, and to define the needs which it will consider humanitarian. The objective of this article is to reset humanitarians’ conceptual and operational understanding of impartiality in order to better reflect and protect humanity in humanitarian praxis, and to help humanitarians navigate the emergent challenges and critical discussions on humanitarian action's position in respect to climate change, triple-nexus programming, or simply a future where staggering levels of urgent needs vastly outstrip humanitarian resources.
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不完美的救济:人道主义行动的公正性和特性面临挑战
作为人道主义四大核心原则之一,"公正 "具有实质性的伦理意义和深层次的操作性,它指导援助机构在不歧视的基础上,根据受危机影响人群的需求寻求和提供援助。旨在落实人道原则的公正性受到了大量外部因素的挑战,如援助工具化、官僚主义限制、国家或非国家武装团体的阻挠以及不安全因素。援助机构或整个部门的内部因素则不那么明显,也较少受到审查。本文基于对文献的案头回顾和作者在无国界医生组织的工作经验,探讨了人道部门在理解和操作公正性方面的不足,并将重点放在这些内部因素上。文章从公正性的定义入手,重点阐述了公正性的两大支柱:提供援助时的非歧视和相称性在实践中的不足。主要结论包括:必须采取主动而非被动的方法来实现非歧视,以及需要对相称性做出更大的承诺。在扩展这一分析时,文章更深入地探讨了援助组织如何对待人道主义原则,指出了该部门在实施、参与和评估这些原则方面的不足之处。鉴于援助部门对处于危机中的人们的包容度或责任感有限,其在行使公正性方面似乎尤其存在问题,因为它有权决定由谁来提供援助,以及提供什么援助,并有权界定它认为属于人道主义的需求。本文旨在重塑人道主义者对 "公正性 "的概念和操作理解,以便在人道主义实践中更好地反映和保护人性,并帮助人道主义者应对新出现的挑战,以及关于人道主义行动在气候变化、三重附件计划编制,或仅仅是在紧急需求远远超过人道主义资源的未来等方面的立场的重要讨论。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.10
自引率
28.60%
发文量
92
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