- 28 pages
- English
- PDF
- Available on iOS & Android
About This Book
National aid workers constitute the majority of aid staff in the field â upwards of 90 per cent for most international NGOs â and undertake the bulk of the work in assisting people in need. Although the statistics show that international (expatriate) aid workers have a higher per capita rate as victims of violent attacks, national staffers, because of their higher numbers and greater exposure in frontline field positions, comprise the vast majority of victims every year. Despite overall improvements in aid agencies' security risk management, national aid workers perceive continued inequities in security support compared with their international counterparts. This Report highlights the issue of national staff's specific needs in terms of operational security, expanding on the findings of the recent study To Stay and Deliver: Good Practice for Humanitarians in Complex Security Environments.
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Table of contents
- Table of contents
- Authors
- Introduction
- 1. Background and definitions
- 2. Differing perceptions of risk
- 3. Gender and security
- 4. Staff care: Disparate levels of security capacity and support
- 5. Organisational policies and approaches to duty of care
- 6. Consultation and participation
- 7. National aid organisations and the need for responsible partnership
- 8. Humanitarian principles: Operational interpretations and applications bynational aid actors
- 9. Conclusions and recommendations
- 10. References and further reading
- Annex 1. People interviewed
- Annex 2. Survey instruments and summary results