NGOs and Risk: How international humanitarian actors manage uncertainty

Author(s)
Abby Stoddard, Katherine Haver, Monica Czwarno
Publication language
English
Pages
39pp
Date published
01 Feb 2016
Type
Research, reports and studies
Keywords
Disaster preparedness, resilience and risk reduction, Contingency Planning, Disaster preparedness, Disaster risk reduction

For humanitarian organisations, the presence of risk in the operating environment can force difficult trade-offs between the needs of people they are trying to serve and the need to mitigate potential harm to their personnel, resources, and reputation. Whether or not the risks to humanitarians have objectively
increased in recent years (and there is evidence that they have), more to the point is how the organisations perceive their risk and how these perceptions have affected their work by dint of new policies and practices. These are the central questions of this study, undertaken by Humanitarian Outcomes on behalf of InterAction, and funded by the Office of US Foreign Disaster Assistance (OFDA) and the Bureau of
Population, Refugees, and Migration (PRM).


Focusing on a participant-sample group of 14 major international NGOs, the study analyses the current approaches to risk in humanitarian action through a systematic review of 240 relevant policy documents, interviews with 96 key informants, and a web-based survey of 398 humanitarian practitioners.