LATEST NEWS
Back to homepageIs Israel Abandoning a Two-State Solution?
12/28/2016. Over the past week, differences between Israel and the United States have boiled over into a scalding diplomatic confrontation between these closest of allies.
Read MoreMigration trends to watch in 2017
12/21/2017. There is no sure way of predicting where the next refugee crisis will come from, but some strong policy trends have emerged.
Read MoreThe Guardian view on the Arab spring: it could happen again
02/01/2017. The Arab world is home to 5% of the global population, but accounts for half of all terrorist attacks. With poverty outpacing the growth in numbers of young people and democracy crushed, a revolt could re-emerge.
Read MoreThe biggest donors of 2016
12/20/2016. Overall, some $22 billion of humanitarian spending was tracked in 2016, up from $20.9 billion in 2015, but not as high as the $23.5 billion reported in 2014.
Read MoreConference on Safeguarding Endangered Cultural Heritage
12/03/2016. That visit provided an opportunity to begin the reconstruction and restoration process of the Timbuktu mausoleums, but also to begin international discussions.
Read MoreIOM’s 107th Governing Council
12/09/2016. Read William Lacy Swing director general's report to the 107th session of the council
Read MoreNew UN chief Guterres pledges to make 2017 'a year for peace'
01/01/2017. On his first day at the helm of the United Nations, Secretary-General António Guterres today pledged to make 2017 a year for peace.
Read MoreAid sector grapples with growing funding gap
12/09/2016. The UN announced that $22.2 billion would be required to meet the needs of an estimated 92.8 million people affected by conflicts and natural disasters in 2017.
Read MoreThe End of the Anglo-American Order
11/30/2016. For decades, the United States and Britain’s vision of democracy and freedom defined the postwar world. What will happen in an age of Donald Trump and Nigel Farage?
Read MoreThe crisis of multilateralism and the future of humanitarian action
11/30/2016. "The crisis consists precisely in the fact that the old is dying and the new cannot be born; in this interregnum a great variety of morbid symptoms appear.'
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