HUMANITARIAN
DIPLOMACY
Context
As the COVID-19 pandemic entered its third year
(and control measures gradually lifted in most
countries), the international community inten-
sified its work on reforms of the global health
architecture, confronting key questions of equity
and effectiveness that were laid bare in COVID
response efforts.
However, at country level, few states had begun
to update their national pandemic prevention
plans or legislation to implement lessons from
the COVID experience.
Meanwhile, the climate crisis continued to drive
disasters
around the world,
but momentum
finally started to accelerate
in global climate
policy, including on steps needed to address the
humanitarian impacts.
In February 2022, the Intergovernmental Panel
on Climate Change launched the Working Group
2 report
on climate change impacts, adapta-
tion and vulnerability, formally recognizing the
humanitarian impacts of climate change, and, in
November, the 27th Conference of the Parties of
the UN Climate Change Convention took a sig-
nificant step with the decision to establish new
financing arrangements for Loss and Damage.
The global gap between humanitarian need and
available funding continued to grow, intensified
by the crisis in Ukraine and neighbouring coun-
tries. That conflict became one of the world’s
worst humanitarian crises at national and
regional levels (with more than six million people
displaced), but also a global phenomenon that
affected lives and livelihoods in distant countries.
These reverberations were equally felt in the pol-
icy space, including through renewed challenges
to humanitarian principles.
These crises also arrived on top of long-term
development challenges, such as rising levels of
sovereign debt among developing countries, con-
tributing to lagging progress against Sustainable
Development Goal targets (including in access
to clean water, universal health care and educa-
tion), combining to make the future less certain
for many millions around the world, particularly
young people.
This intersection
of crisis and development
rose higher in development policy debate as
well, notably at the “Effective
Development
Co-operation Summit” in December.
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