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Contents

SIPRI Yearbook 2016

SIPRI Yearbook 2016

II. Humanitarian operations in 2015

Chapter:
9. The challenges of relief and development in dangerous places
Source:
SIPRI Yearbook 2016
Author(s):
Gary Milante

The overlapping relationship between relief and development is not new. Food security crises in Africa in the 1980s saw the first attempts to connect the humanitarian and development fields.1 Early frameworks proposed a ‘relief–development continuum’ wherein relief activities could be designed to build the foundation for longer engagements and bridge financing and programming gaps.2 Later frameworks evolved to accommodate overlapping and often concurrent activities. The Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) also blurred many of these distinctions, and both development and humanitarian action were increasingly provided in insecure environments, suggesting the ‘securitization’ of both development and relief activities and the shrinking, merging or overlapping of these spaces.

Citation (MLA):
Milante, Gary. "9. The challenges of relief and development in dangerous places." SIPRI Yearbook. SIPRI. Oxford: Oxford University Press. 2016. Web. 5 Dec. 2024. <https://www.sipriyearbook.org/view/9780198787280/sipri-9780198787280-chapter-009-div1-067.xml>.
Citation (APA):
Milante, G. (2016). 9. The challenges of relief and development in dangerous places. In SIPRI, SIPRI Yearbook 2016: Armaments, Disarmament and International Security. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Retrieved 5 Dec. 2024, from https://www.sipriyearbook.org/view/9780198787280/sipri-9780198787280-chapter-009-div1-067.xml
Citation (Chicago):
Milante, Gary. "9. The challenges of relief and development in dangerous places." In SIPRI Yearbook 2016: Armaments, Disarmament and International Security, SIPRI. (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2016). Retrieved 5 Dec. 2024, from https://www.sipriyearbook.org/view/9780198787280/sipri-9780198787280-chapter-009-div1-067.xml
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