Humanitarian
in sentence
1040 examples of Humanitarian in a sentence
In the world of
humanitarian
aid, there are very few decision scientists.
Long-term partnerships allow you to build relationships, to get to know the data, to really understand it and to start to understand the needs and challenges that the
humanitarian
organization is facing.
Well for one thing, beyond the good PR,
humanitarian
aid is a 24-billion-dollar sector, and there's over five billion people, maybe your next customers, that live in the developing world.
For the
humanitarian
world, this provides information about how you might bring people out of poverty.
Data philanthropy makes good business sense, and it also can help revolutionize the
humanitarian
world.
If we coordinated the planning and logistics across all of the major facets of a
humanitarian
operation, we could feed, clothe and shelter hundreds of thousands more people, and companies need to step up and play the role that I know they can in bringing about this revolution.
The
humanitarian
organization CARE wanted to launch a campaign on gender equality in villages in northern India.
When these family needs are prioritized, interventions for children in
humanitarian
settings will prioritize and recognize the primary role of the family in supporting children.
And in the context of
humanitarian
crises, like Syrian mothers fleeing war zones, the smallest drops can buffer babies from the biggest global challenges.
The sound is of walls being built, vengeful political rhetoric,
humanitarian
values and principles on fire in the very countries that 70 years ago said never again to statelessness and hopelessness for the victims of war.
In Uganda in 2014, they did a study: 80 percent of refugees in the capital city Kampala needed no
humanitarian
aid because they were working.
That is the future of the
humanitarian
system, or a significant part of it: give people cash so that you boost the power of refugees and you'll help the local economy.
You can't make up for foreign policy errors by
humanitarian
action, but when you break something, you have a duty to try to help repair it, and that's our duty now.
And when you come up against that crisis point in situations of grave violations of international and
humanitarian
law, if you don't understand what you're seeing, if you don't understand the truth and if you get trapped in the fake news paradigm, then you are an accomplice.
But what's most exciting is that we help
humanitarian
and service organizations collect the data and the analytics that's necessary to understand the changing needs of newcomers in real time.
And we'll start off with what we all know is of course a political and
humanitarian
catastrophe that is Syria.
We put people on
humanitarian
aid and we boast about it because we've spent three billion.
The only criticism, and people really don't want to criticize this, because it is a
humanitarian
effort, a nonprofit effort and to criticize it is a little bit stupid, actually.
Humanitarian
aid is also critical.
Organizations like HIAS, where I work, and other
humanitarian
and faith-based organizations, make it easy for you to take a stand when there's a law that's worth opposing or a law that's worth supporting or a policy that needs oversight.
It's been going on for over four years, and it has led to a
humanitarian
crisis.
Now, True is a real
humanitarian.
At its core is a very human and
humanitarian
crisis.
When I was about 24 years old, Kate Stohr and myself started an organization to get architects and designers involved in
humanitarian
work, not only about responding to natural disasters, but involved in systemic issues.
We advocate for good design, not only through student workshops and lectures and public forums, op-eds; we have a book on
humanitarian
work; but also disaster mitigation and dealing with public policy.
There are hundreds and hundreds and hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of architects and designers and inventors around the world that are getting involved in
humanitarian
work.
My role is not as a designer; it's as a conduit between the design world and the
humanitarian
world.
Designers want to respond to issues of
humanitarian
crisis, but they don't want some company in the West taking their idea and basically profiting from it.
What has amazed me for all these years has been the amazing
humanitarian
response of the community there in south Texas.
Well, that evening, when I was at the
humanitarian
respite center, the little boy walked in with his mother.
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