Roi and Roi/Shutterstock.com
The international aid sector’s use of languages needs to change if it is serious about dealing with the issues raised by recent scandals.
The Sea-Watch 3 vessel in Malta in late June 2018.
Vicki Squire
The Sea-Watch 3 vessel has been prevented from leaving Malta to continue its search and rescue operations in the Mediterranean.
The Israeli army launches tear gas at protesters on the border with Gaza.
EPA/Luca Piergiovanni
International NGOs are promoting a ‘resilience agenda’ that masks their own failings in Palestine.
Most South Africans are locked out of economic opportunities.
EPA-EFE/Kim Ludbrook
The majority of South Africans are separated from the wealthy and formal-sector employed minority.
Liu zishan/Shutterstock.com
AI seems able to answer questions at the heart of humanitarianism – questions such as who we should save, and how to be effective at scale.
EPA/Bahare Khodabande
It’s all too easy to miss the point about sex work in areas hit by conflict and disaster. How about listening to the people who experience it?
chrisdorney / Shutterstock.com
Regulation adds operational costs that are often inefficient to the delivery of services, or even completely unnecessary.
What if air quality standards were decided not by governments but by a dedicated federal body?
AAP Image/Dan Peled
Environmental and health groups have called for the creation of a non-political federal agency with the power to rule on pollution levels - much like the Reserve Bank does for interest rates.
Reports of sexual misconduct by Oxfam aid workers sparked a flurry of other allegations.
Andy Rain/EPA
To stop sexual exploitation in the aid sector, more self-regulation by NGOs isn’t the answer.
Nick Ansell/PA Wire/PA Images
Oxfam is not the first charity to be drawn into a high profile scandal. If it is to survive it needs draw on its core ideals.
UK aid: a big spender.
Defence Images/flickr.com
After a scandal involving Oxfam in Haiti, the UK government has threatened to withdraw aid money from the charity.
Children in disaster zones are often highly vulnerable.
EPA/Jean Jacques Augustin
Shocking allegations of abuse by Oxfam aid workers in Haiti are testament to how badly the aid sector needs deep, systemic reform.
Oxfam: under pressure.
Oxfam East Africa/flickr.com
Power imbalances and inequality lie at the heart of the international development industry. But the Oxfam scandal shows that organisations mustn’t succumb to it.
The genocide memorial in Kigali. Humanitarian workers in Rwanda had to deal daily with the horrors of war.
Trocaire/Flickr
It is shocking to see the extent to which humanitarian workers in Rwanda became regular eyewitnesses to violence, murder and large-scale massacres in 1994.
The government has been criticised for its appointment of Gary Johns to head up Australia’s independent charities regulator.
AAP/Mick Tsikas
Australians have reason to be apprehensive that some civil voices are not being heard in our liberal democracy.
Women’s NGOs work hard to improve the lives of women in the developing world, including in countries like India and Tanzania. But then they’re often cut out from the process. This photo was taken in the remote village of Uzi on Zanzibar Island in Tanzania in April 2016.
(Shutterstock)
NGOs (non-government organizations) run by women in India and Tanzania fuel the success of development projects, but the women are too easily marginalized once the projects get off the ground.
Gemma Bird
Along the Balkan route, refugees and migrants are still in need of emergency aid.
A young boy being treated at Baghbanan health centre.
A small community health project in north-west Pakistan is showing how UK aid can change lives and perhaps have an impact on national security.
Migrants are being rescued by members of the “Proactiva open arms” NGO, off the coast of the Island of Lesbos (Greece).
Ggia/Wikimedia
Accused of cooperating with smugglers, NGOs defend migrants’ right to life and point to the inadequate policies of European states.
Protestors hold banners saying ‘No to the stigmatisation of civilians’ at a meeting of the Hungarian parliament’s justice committee, prior to the bill’s approval.
Laszlo Balogh/Reuters
FROM OUR ARCHIVES (UPDATED) Hungary has passed a law monitoring the finances of foreign-funded NGOs, another blow to civil society in Viktor Orban’s increasingly “illiberal democracy”.