Examining how states respond to international humanitarian assistance in situations of armed conflict — and why these responses vary.
HUMANITY examines how states respond to international humanitarian assistance in situations of armed conflict.
Some governments cooperate with aid organizations, while others obstruct, restrict, or instrumentalize them. The project seeks to explain why these variations occur, by developing a comparative typology of state responses and identifying the conditions that shape them.
Identify and classify distinct patterns of state response to international humanitarian assistance.
Analyse political, institutional, and diplomatic conditions associated with different response patterns.
Examine how combinations of conditions produce cooperation, control, or confrontation.
The project views sovereignty as a dynamic and socially constructed process rather than a fixed principle.
Through this lens, HUMANITY identifies recurring patterns of state engagement with humanitarian actors, including administrative gatekeeping, coercive control, symbolic cooperation, conditional partnership, normative regulation, and developmental integration.
HUMANITY adopts a mixed-methods comparative design combining:
Six recurring patterns identified through which states engage with international humanitarian actors
Bureaucratic control over access, registration, and operational permissions
Direct interference through force, arrests, or expulsion of humanitarian actors
Public endorsement of humanitarian principles without substantive engagement
State claims leadership while structurally delegating implementation and resources to international actors
Moral or ideological regulation of humanitarian activities and personnel
Embedding humanitarian functions within national development frameworks
Humanity and Sovereignty
Peer-reviewed publications and a policy brief
Shared via Figshare and this website
Convening researchers and practitioners
The project's findings contribute to scholarship, policy, and frontline humanitarian operations.
Advance understanding of the politics of humanitarianism and sovereignty in conflict settings.
Inform strategies for humanitarian organizations and UN agencies working in contested environments.
Contribute to more effective and principled humanitarian action in conflict-affected areas.
Hosted at the Humanitarian and Conflict Response Institute (HCRI), University of Manchester, and supervised by Dr Miriam Bradley.
HUMANITY draws on HCRI's world-leading expertise in humanitarian studies and its network of partnerships bridging research and field practice.
HUMANITY is funded by the European Union's Horizon Europe research and innovation programme under the Marie Skłodowska-Curie Postdoctoral Fellowship (Grant Agreement No. 101206070).
Funded by the European Union. Views and opinions expressed are however those of the author(s) only and do not necessarily reflect those of the European Union or the European Research Executive Agency (REA). Neither the European Union nor the granting authority can be held responsible for them.