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The cliché of resilience in the face of never-ending crises can be harmful and steer people away from the help they need.
Journalists, as well as humanitarian agencies, risk complicity in suffering if they confuse ethics with moral values.
I recalled the day we left our home two years ago, and the week I spent moving from one place to another in Khartoum, dodging ...
As ever more Ethiopian migrants make dangerous crossings to the Gulf, they encounter a dark transnational economy in which ...
Dozens of countries are already using the tool created by IOM, accelerating deportation processes that critics say are riven ...
Six weeks after a major new disaster, calls are growing to find new ways to address a host of access, funding, and structural ...
As Israel escalates its war in Gaza, Rasha Jalal reflects on the tension between trying to protect her children and ...
The first aid deliveries in nearly three months were allowed into the Gaza Strip by Israel on 21 May amid ongoing heavy ...
Our ability to deliver compelling, field-based reporting on humanitarian crises rests on a few key principles: deep expertise ...
Chuol, like many others, said he fled airstrikes in Nasir and sought refuge in Burbeiye, but was forced to flee again after ...
Six key actions countries can take – and should have taken a long time ago – if they are to liberate themselves from ...
What Palestinians are living through is not just a crisis. It’s a collapse of international order, and it's not isolated to ...