Harvard Humanitarian Initiative

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Issue in Focus

HHI Responds to Earthquake Devastation in Haiti

In response to the Haiti earthquake disaster, the Harvard Humanitarian Initiative (HHI) is playing a lead role in supporting the coordination of the Harvard-wide response including that of the Harvard-affiliated hospitals within Partners Health Care System. By leveraging HHI’s unique position as an academic and research center with long-standing ties to leading medical and public health personnel, HHI has been able to facilitate the deployment of more than 70 surgeons, emergency physicians, anesthesiologists and nurses to Haiti in the immediate aftermath of the earthquake.

To read more about HHI’s response to the Haiti earthquake, please visit our Earthquake in Haiti page.

To find out how to volunteer, visit our Volunteer in Haiti page.

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Want to Volunteer in Haiti?

Visit HHI's Volunteer in Haiti page to find out if volunteering with HHI is right for you.

HHI in the media: responding to Haiti

See articles about HHI's relief efforts in Port-au-Prince.

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Homepage Events

Burden of Surgical Disease

Led by Fellow Kelly McQueen, the 3rd annual Working Group Meeting will be held March 10-12 at Vanderbilt University. 

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Gender-Based Violence

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Rape as a Weapon of War

In the last 25 years, campaigns of mass rape by armed state and non-state actors have become widespread, appearing to take place as a structured aspect of organized hostile action against civilian populations. These campaigns have occurred in the Balkans, Sierra Leone, Rwanda, Liberia, Sudan, Uganda, and Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). Mass rape can serve the strategic aims of aggressors and is peculiarly suited to campaigns of ethnic cleansing and genocide intended to remove or destroy a stigmatized population and demolish the potential for regeneration.

 

Research to Inform Policy

The ongoing incidence of mass rape in current wars challenges the international community to explore further options, in terms of policy, program, and research. HHI aims to present an analysis of current patterns of mass rape in internal wars, identifying key factors of opportunity, vulnerability, and impunity that support the ongoing practice of mass rape. HHI's research also offers an assessment of current approaches taken by relief agencies, highlighting avenues for further efforts that can reduce the future incidence of these atrocities and relieve the suffering of current survivors, their families, and their communities.

 

Current Projects

  • Democratic Republic of Congo
    HHI is partnering with UN-OCHA, Brigham & Women's Hospital, Panzi Hospital in Bukavu, and other organizations to address widespread sexual violence in the eastern region of the DRC. Read more…
  • Darfur, Chad & Sudan
    HHI faculty have been documenting mass rape in Darfur and Chad since 2005 to inform policy makers on intervention strategies for the protection of displaced women. Read more…

 

Published Reports

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Nowhere to Turn: Failure to Protect, Support and Assure Justice for Darfuri Women

Nowhere to Turn is a report documenting the scope and long-term impact of rape and other sexual violence experienced by women who fled attacks on their villages in Darfur and are now refugees in neighboring Chad. The report is based on a scientific study, conducted in partnership with Physicians for Human Rights, of women's accounts of rape and other crimes against humanity that they have experienced in Darfur, as well as rape and deprivations of basic needs in refugee camps in Chad.

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Characterizing Sexual Violence in the Democratic Republic of the Congo: Profiles of Violence, Community Responses, and Implications for the Protection of Women

 

This report uses both quantitative and qualitative methods to explore sexual violence in the Democratic Replublic of Congo.  Results from this report show the sexual violence perpetrated by armed actors in the DRC has features that indicate rape is being used as a weapon of war. The violence in DRC embodies a new kind of war emerging in the 21st century - one that occurs in villages more than battlefields and affects more civilians than armed combatants.