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Shaping policy for development

An overview of Lagoro IDP camp in Kitgum District, northern Uganda, 20 May 2007. Manoocher Deghati/IRIN
Mon, 10/07/2013 - 12:49 -- Anonymous (not verified)
Durum. Dissemination session to JEM (Justice and Equality Movement) combatants.
Durum. Dissemination session to JEM (Justice and Equality Movement) combatants.

Durum. Dissemination session to JEM (Justice and Equality Movement) combatants.
License: ODI given rights
Credit: CICR/HEGER, Boris
Source: ICRC

Humanitarian negotiations with armed non-state actors

April 2011 to March 2013
Details
Leaders: 
Status: 
Active

Over the past two decades, humanitarian actors have expanded the geographic scope of their work to more challenging and dangerous environments. As a result, negotiations with armed non-state actors (ANSAs) have become increasingly important in order to gain access to populations in need of their assistance. Yet many humanitarian actors feel that negotiating with ANSAs presents formidable challenges, including a lack respect for international humanitarian law (IHL), hostility to humanitarian principles and distrust and suspicion of humanitarian organisations. 


A wide range of external factors have also come to bear on agencies’ ability, willingness and capacity to engage, both individually and collectively, with ANSAs. Chief among these has been the so-called ‘politicisation of aid.’ In contexts such as Afghanistan and Iraq, the majority of funding for humanitarian and multi-mandate agencies is provided by belligerents on one side of the conflict who increasingly view assistance as integral to achieving their military and/or political objectives, potentially undermining the neutrality and impartiality of humanitarian actors. In Somalia, Sri Lanka and Gaza, counter-terror legislation and other measures aimed at preventing aid from flowing to designated ‘terrorist’ organisations has also often forced agencies to make an impossible choice between principles on the one hand and funding and/or access to affected populations on the other. 

An in-depth analysis of the role of ANSAs has been largely neglected in much of the literature on humanitarian space and many agencies on the ground fail to adequately understand ANSAs’ interests and motives. Likewise, many agencies have neglected to engage ANSAs in a strategic way or have not developed sufficient institutional capacity to support dialogue with ANSAs. This has sometimes resulted in a failure to train staff on the ground in negotiating skills, often exacerbated by the high turnover and other operational challenges many humanitarian actors face in difficult environments. As a result, humanitarian negotiators often lack adequate understanding of the ANSAs that they are seeking to engage with and are ill-prepared for the process. 


This project aims to better understand how aid agencies engage with ANSAs, and how humanitarian engagement ultimately affects access to protection and assistance for vulnerable populations. It will seek to examine various issues and country case studies that illuminate this engagement in difficult political and security environments. This includes what lessons can be learned from experiences of negotiations and dialogue with ANSAs to ensure that vulnerable populations are better able to access assistance and protection. It will also explore the risks inherent to this engagement, including the moral dilemmas that often arise and the compromises that agencies make in order to gain access.

Humanitarian Policy Group
HPG Integrated Programme (HPG IP)
Outputs
Members of the  coalition of rebel forces in Darfur, Sudan
Members of the coalition of rebel forces in Darfur, Sudan

Fanga Suk: Members of the coalition of rebel forces (SLA Minni Minawi, SLA Abdul Wahid and LJM) who control Fanga Suk village, in East Jebel Marra (West Darfur), 88 kilometres West Tawilla.
License: Creative Commons
Credit: Albert Gonzalez Farran / UNAMID
Source: Flickr

Humanitarian negotiations: engagement with armed groups in Sudan and South Sudan

Event - Public event - 10 October 2013 14:00 - 15:30 (GMT+01 (BST))

This event will examine the role of humanitarian negotiations with state and non-state armed groups in Darfur, Southern Kordofan and Jonglei State. Interviews with armed groups, the results of field research and practical experience in humanitarian engagement, with armed groups will be shared with the audience as speakers discuss whether these negotiations contributed to a stronger and more effective humanitarian response in the region.

An ICRC delegate with a member of the SLA
An ICRC delegate with a member of the SLA

An ICRC delegate with a member of the Sudan Liberation Army (SLA) in Sudan
License: ICRC granted rights
Credit: ICRC/ HEGER, Boris / V-P-SD-E-0 1934
Source: ICRC

Humanitarian negotiations: talking to the 'other side'

Event - Public event - 5 September 2013 13:00 - 15:00 (GMT+01 (BST))

Humanitarian negotiations are often essential to gaining access to populations in need of humanitarian assistance, but negotiating with armed non-state actors can present formidable challenges. This event will discuss the challenges and compromises involved and the resources and tools that have been developed to support more effective engagement.

Dialogue with an opposition group and community in Darfur
Dialogue with an opposition group and community in Darfur

Dialogue with an opposition group and community in Darfur, 2007
License: ODI given rights
Credit: Conflict Dynamics International
Source: Conflict Dynamics International

Humanitarian negotiations: engaging with state and non-state actors in the midst of conflict

Event - Public event - 5 September - 6 November 2013

This event series will examine the challenges and compromises involved in humanitarian negotiations with state and non-state armed actors, how engagement affects access to populations, and what lessons can be learned.

Talking to the 'other side': Humanitarian negotiations in Southern Kordofan and Blue Nile, Sudan

Publication - Research reports and studies - 30 August 2013
This Working Paper examines humanitarian negotiations with armed non-state actors in Southern Kordofan and Blue Nile. Through interviews with armed groups, aid workers, local and international experts and civilians, the study aims to improve understanding of the opportunities for, and obstacles to, engagement with the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement-North (SPLM-N) and the Government of Sudan for humanitarian access.

Talking to the 'other side': humanitarian negotiations with armed non-state actors in Darfur, Sudan, 2003-2012

Publication - Research reports and studies - 30 August 2013
Jonathan Loeb
This Working Paper focuses on the humanitarian community’s extensive engagement with rebel movements in Darfur from 2003-2012. Based on first-hand accounts of experiences of aid workers and rebels who participated in humanitarian negotiations, it documents the rise, decline and disappearance of cross-line aid over the last ten years.

Humanitarian Exchange 58: Humanitarian Negotiations

Publication - Research reports and studies - 30 July 2013
Humanitarian Practice Network, Ashley Jackson and contributors
This edition of Humanitarian Exchange, co-edited with Humanitarian Policy Group (HPG) Research Fellow Ashley Jackson, features humanitarian negotiations. In many contexts, negotiations with a wide array of actors – both state and non-state – are essential to gaining access to populations in need of assistance. This issue looks at field experiences of undertaking humanitarian negotiations, the challenges and compromises involved and the resources and tools that have been developed to support more effective engagement.
Ashley Jackson

For humanitarian workers, the Taliban is a key to access in Afghanistan

Opinion - Articles and blogs - 1 February 2013

As international troops withdraw from Afghanistan, aid agencies will experience a titanic shift in their security infrastructure and be forced to reassess how they access those in need. Though the Taliban have a complex and predominantly hostile view of such agencies, those that wish to continue working in Afghanistan must learn to understand and negotiate with them. Yet, until now, little substantive research has been conducted on the Taliban to understand how to effectively engage with them.

Key Conclusions

Ashley Jackson

Talking to the Taliban

Opinion - Articles and blogs - 12 December 2012

As international troops withdraw from Afghanistan and prepare to hand over security in 2014, HPG’s newly published research based on scores of interviews with the Taliban provides a rare insight into their relationship with aid organisations.

ICRC team at a Kabul checkpoint
ICRC team at a Kabul checkpoint

Afghanistan: An ICRC team at a Kabul checkpoint manned by one of the numerous armed groups active in the city in 1994
License: ODI given rights
Credit: © ICRC / Thierry Gassman
Source: ICRC website

The other side: humanitarian engagement with the Taliban in Afghanistan

Event - Public event - 11 December 2012 11:00 - 12:30 (GMT+00)

This event launches a new report into how aid agencies engage with the Taliban to gain access to Afghans in need of assistance. It offers a valuable and rare insight into how the Taliban view humanitarian and development assistance. The report draws on dozens of interviews with Taliban militia and leaders and conversely, investigates the approaches used by aid agencies to gain access to populations in Taliban-held territory.

Talking to the other side: Humanitarian engagement with armed non-state actors

Publication - Briefing papers - 28 June 2012
This HPG Policy Brief explores the obstacles to and opportunities for humanitarian dialogue with armed non-state actors (ANSAs). It begins with the rationale for such engagement and the applicable legal frameworks. It then provides an overview of the challenges that humanitarian actors face when engaging in dialogue with ANSAs on issues of access, assistance and protection.