In March 2023, the UN Security Council extended the mandate of the UN Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) for a twelve-month period. In parallel, the council adopted Resolution 2679 (2023), which requested that the UN secretary-general provide the Security Council with an integrated, independent assessment of the international community’s approach to Afghanistan by November 17, […]
Read moreHumanitarian Affairs and Human Rights
Making Sanctions Smarter: Safeguarding Humanitarian Action
There have been ongoing efforts to ensure that UN sanctions are more targeted and do not affect the livelihoods of the general population. Yet in some instances, UN sanctions along with national sanctions regimes have unintentionally impeded principled humanitarian action. The impact of sanctions on impartial humanitarian aid is often indirect and diffuse, reverberating across the humanitarian supply chain and involving numerous stakeholders, including member states, humanitarian organizations, financial institutions, and donors. De-risking by the private sector, restrictive clauses in donor agreements, and chilling effects on humanitarian workers are some of the challenges having an impact on principled humanitarian action.
Building on IPI’s 2019 report on sanctions and humanitarian action, IPI will develop concrete measures to proactively and preventively limit the impact of UN sanction regimes on principled humanitarian action. IPI will examine a set of sanction regimes and address the systemic issues they pose for principled humanitarian action. A series of four roundtables (virtual or in-person) will gather key stakeholders and technical experts to review the impacts of these sanctions regimes on the delivery of humanitarian assistance. These roundtables will foster engagement between humanitarian and sanctions stakeholders, contributing to a shared understanding of the challenges faced by the humanitarian sector in effectively delivering humanitarian aid under sanctioned regimes. The roundtables will analyze the dynamics at play and identify specific and actionable solutions. This series of roundtables, complemented by research, will foster the development of a range of general and regime-specific options for the UN Security Council to consider. The research and recommendations will be reflected in a policy paper.
Peace and Health in Pakistan and Afghanistan
In 2021, IPI will continue its strategic partnership with the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation (BMGF) on issues related to peace and health. This includes research on the security situation in polio-affected regions of Pakistan and Afghanistan to reduce risks and increase the effectiveness of the campaign to eradicate polio. IPI will also advise BMGF more broadly on issues related to peace and development in Pakistan.
Policy and Programming on Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity at the UN
In September 2015, twelve UN entities issued a joint statement calling for an end to violence and discrimination against lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and intersex (LGBTI) people. This came after more than twenty years of efforts by civil society organizations and UN member states to put issues related to sexual orientation, gender identity and expression, and sex characteristics (SOGIESC) on the agenda at the UN. But what are these UN entities actually doing, and when and how did they start doing it?
In 2020, IPI set out to answer these questions through research on UN policy and programming on SOGIESC—the first in-depth, system-wide mapping of the work of UN agencies, funds, and programs on this topic. Contingent on funding, in 2021, IPI will continue engaging with the UN’s LGBTI focal points and other relevant staff, representatives of member states from the LGBTI Core Group, and LGBTI activists to share the findings of this research and consult on next steps. A second phase of the project will focus on one or more of the following topics:
- UN programming on SOGIESC at the regional or country level (e.g., in Latin America, Southeast Asia, sub-Saharan Africa, or Eastern Europe);
- The intersection between SOGIESC and gender at the UN, including the extent to which UN gender experts, trainings, reports, and policies look beyond the gender binary; and
- UN internal policies and practices on the inclusion of LGBTI people.
News, Events, Publications
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Over the past two decades, attacks on healthcare in situations of armed conflict have been reported at alarming levels. By collecting data on these attacks, states can better understand the scale and scope of the problem, protect health services and workers, and prevent future attacks.On December 1st, IPI with the support of the Government of […]
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Attacks on healthcare in situations of armed conflict have been reported at alarming levels over the past two decades. In response to this problem, the UN Security Council unanimously passed Resolution 2286, which urges states to collect data on attacks on medical personnel, transport, and facilities. This data is essential to understand the scale and […]
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Since the terrorist attacks of September 11th, 2001, the UN Security Council has developed two main streams of work related to counterterrorism: the sanctions regime established by Resolution 1267 and measures under Resolution 1373. However, these resolutions and related sanctions regimes have been criticized for failing to safeguard and facilitate impartial humanitarian action. In response, […]
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Sexual orientation, gender identity and expression, and sex characteristics (SOGIESC) have been on the UN’s agenda for more than twenty-five years. Many of the earliest developments took place in the UN human rights mechanisms and Human Rights Council. Increasingly, however, UN agencies, funds, and programs are also integrating SOGIESC into their policy and programming.This paper […]
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UN political engagement in Nepal between 2002 and 2018 has long been considered a successful example of sustained and innovative support to a critical peace process. Many governments in the broader region, however, have largely eschewed international assistance in resolving conflicts, perceiving it as an unnecessary infringement on state sovereignty or a threat to regional […]
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The extent to which consideration of human rights is integrated into the generation, operational configuration, and evaluation of uniformed personnel of United Nations peacekeeping missions was the subject of a June 25th virtual event co-sponsored by IPI and the Permanent Mission of Finland to the UN. The event served to launch the policy paper Integrating […]
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The effectiveness of UN peace operations depends on the “operational readiness” of their personnel, which refers to the knowledge, expertise, training, equipment, and mindset needed to carry out mandated tasks. While the need to improve the operational readiness of peacekeepers has been increasingly recognized over the past few years, the concept of “human rights readiness”—the […]
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Sanctions can end up hindering humanitarian assistance and the provision of life-saving medical care in armed conflict, and forestalling that outcome was the subject of a January 28th policy forum at IPI, co-hosted with the Permanent Mission of Germany to the United Nations.The discussion centered on a new IPI report, Making Sanctions Smarter: Safeguarding Humanitarian […]
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In recent decades, sanctions have increasingly been used as a foreign policy tool. The UN Security Council has imposed a total of fourteen sanctions regimes alongside those imposed autonomously by the EU, the US, and other countries. Despite efforts to institute more targeted sanctions regimes, these regimes continue to impede or prevent the provision of […]
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