How vases break

East and West Germans in front of the Brandeburg Door during the fall of the Berlin wall in 1989

We are all well aware of the scale of the transformations currently underway; there is no need to list them. What matters now is understanding what they reveal.

The tensions we have seen escalate in recent years are leading to the normalization of violence within our societies and between them. Violence is surely one of the oldest mechanisms for resolving conflict; it allows political or economic objectives to be achieved quite effectively, and now at little cost. Conflicts are therefore proliferating. These conflicts, even local ones, cause shocks whose effects often spill over beyond the areas where they occur.

For these shocks do more than simply disrupt the smooth functioning of human systems. They reveal their vulnerabilities. These underlying vulnerabilities—often invisible or underestimated fault lines—are nevertheless very much present. Like a vase that breaks, perhaps not at the first impact, perhaps not at the second, but one day, a tiny jolt can trigger a disproportionate reaction, and the vase breaks where the structure is most fragile. For societies and countries, there are structural vulnerabilities—the so-called “root causes,” those deep-seated issues we can do little about: poorly defined borders, extreme climates, history, and geography. And then there are more immediate factors of fragility or resilience: governance, demographics, the management of scarce or abundant resources, levels of development and security, social cohesion, and so on.

© AFP – Chart about climate change based on the last GIEC report

Yet the traditional foundations of energy systems, ecological stability, governance structures, and technological infrastructure continue to shift, creating significant uncertainty about future risks. What is at stake, ultimately, is the ability of systems—economic, political, and societal—to self-regulate, absorb shocks, and adapt to them, because the only certainty is that this is not over.

Shocks of all kinds are interconnected and therefore more systemic. A regional shock in the Persian Gulf directly impacts the number of days worked in Sri Lanka, or access to healthcare in Somalia. You may also recall the 2010 eruption of Eyjafjallajökull in Iceland and its effect on air traffic across Europe.

© UNNEWS – Graph representing the correlation between the rise of gaz and fertilizers pricessince the Strait of Hormuz blocade

Governments—and, even more rapidly, private companies—have begun to adapt to this era of high volatility. The insurance sector, for example, which is so fundamental to global logistics, is changing its perception of what is insurable and what is not, giving rise to hybrid public-private risk management mechanisms that are becoming key components of the globalized economic system.

In many countries, the repeated shocks since the start of the century have gradually eroded fiscal, energy, and food reserves, as well as institutional capacities and social cohesion. We are therefore indeed facing a crisis of resilience that we must all now address. Of course, countries that start out with disadvantages in governance, financial dependence, or energy dependence are the most vulnerable, and thus their fragility worsens. Some countries become trapped in cycles where each crisis reduces their capacity to respond to the next one, which is sure to follow soon.

© Solidarités International – Well in the Khodai Ram village, Gulestan region in Iran (2023)

The lack of investment in resilience and shock-absorption mechanisms thus guarantees future instability, even in countries that appear to be stable. Foreign exchange reserves and dependence on energy or fertilizer imports are making headlines right now. Dependence on food imports was highlighted at the start of the war in Ukraine. Inflation and debt levels were key factors during the financial crises and even during the COVID-19 pandemic. But societal risks are just as significant. These include educational attainment, access to healthcare and social services, energy and food, employment, the prevalence of organized crime and corruption, as well as information and religious systems, and so on. Failing to pay attention to these factors means ignoring vulnerabilities through which a crisis could arise or resilience factors that can be leveraged.

In this context, economic and social development is certainly a positive step toward increasing these absorption capacities, and the idea that better-off countries should assist those less fortunate is a matter of common sense, given the regional or global repercussions of even localized instability.

© Cristian Camilo Estrada – In the context of a global crisis, cooperation is more important than ever

The Sustainable Development Goals are no longer really the framework of reference for development actors. The bright colors of the 17 small numbered squares have certainly faded. International standards are no longer held in high regard either. In Sudan as in Lebanon, international humanitarian law is violated every day with complete impunity. This impunity is not without consequences, as it undermines the credibility and legitimacy of the system of solidarity and cooperation, as evidenced first and foremost by the decline in ODA investment.

Yet numerous initiatives are underway to establish new rules of the game for cooperation—that is, in fact, new dynamics of power distribution around development. What does ODA represent, to whom and for what purpose does it serve, and what effort does it measure? Who implements it? In all the current initiatives and proposals, no one is seriously suggesting a complete halt to cooperation, even in its most limited form. Rather, it must simply adapt to a harsher international environment.

For DAC members, the scale of the defense capability shortfall is such that addressing it has become a political and budgetary priority that leaves no room for development—in Europe, of course, but not only there. The Asian region is arming itself just as rapidly. Yet, as the Chief of Staff of the Army, General Schill, recently noted in Grand Continent, the boundaries between the civilian and military spheres have become so blurred that it is difficult to distinguish war from peace, with the contours of conflict becoming so indistinct that peace itself would seem to be the continuation of war by other means. Thus, whether through influence and information, the projection of values, or trade terms, development cooperation can no longer be treated as a sphere of public policy sheltered from the world’s turmoil.

© Markus Rauchenberger – Truck equiped with a Caesar canon and driven by Frencg soldiers during a NATO training exercice in 2018 (Dynamic Front)

Understanding the political nature of international cooperation does not mean that it must renounce its fundamental values—democracy, the rule of law, peace, human rights, gender equality, and freedom. On the contrary, these values are our defining hallmark, and they must not be abandoned in exchange for a bag of rare earths or simply out of intellectual laziness. The goal is to anchor and sharpen these principles in a more complex and competitive environment and use their value to build resilience against future shocks.

Cyprien Fabre.


Cyprien Fabre is the head of the « crises and fragilities » unit at the OECD. After several years of humanitarian missions with Solidarités, he joins ECHO, the humanitarian department of the European Commission in 2003, and holds several positions in crisis contexts. He joins the OECD in 2016 to analyze the engagement of DAC members in fragile or crisis-affected countries. He has also written a series of “policy into action” guides then ”Lives in crises” in order to help translate political and financial commitments of donors into effective programming in crises. He graduated from the Faculty of Law of Aix-Marseille.

 


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Call to readers, Alain Boinet for Défis Humanitaire

Alain Boinet at the Goris Francophone Center in Armenia with Sylvain Tesson and Vincent Montagne. Photo by Antoine Agoudjian, whom we thank for this photo.

Letter to the readers of Défis Humanitaires

“The world’s agenda is changing. Défis Humanitaires must evolve its mission.”

Dear reader,

This is an unusual and even exceptional letter that I am personally addressing to you today.

Indeed, I believe that the many fractures we are experiencing herald a radical change of era and that we must together draw the lessons from it.

Since the launch of Défis Humanitaires we have published more than 500 articles and interviews and I believe that Défis Humanitaires fulfills its mission. Is it enough?

Today, we are witnessing two major ruptures: a fragmentation of the world where tensions are intensifying and an increase in humanitarian needs in the face of a sharp drop in funding.

Other risks exacerbate this tension: crisis of liberal democracy, global warming, loss of biodiversity, manipulated information.

Yet, great progress is taking place in the fields of research, health and life expectancy, human development, and education. However, hunger is rising again in the world, demography is exploding in Africa, disasters are multiplying, the climate is burning.

For 50 years, we have lived through three geopolitical periods: the Cold War, the fall of the Berlin Wall and the USSR, terrorism and the destruction of the World Trade Center in New York.

During these periods, humanitarian aid has continued to grow within the framework of a triple movement: the responsibility to protect populations in danger, economic globalization and a Western interventionist hegemony.

This period is over: war in Ukraine following Russia’s invasion, second election of Donald Trump, emergence of China as an imperial power, but also increase in military budgets, success of the BRICS, emergence of the Global South, dangerous tensions in the Asia-Pacific, increase in customs duties…

It is at this moment that the countries financing Official Development Assistance (ODA) and humanitarian action decide, led by the United States, to drastically reduce their funding.

At the “Paris Peace Forum”, the representative of one of the main donor countries announced with regret that ODA would decrease by 50%, or even more.

Concerning humanitarian aid, the fall in funding is such that the UN (OCHA) had to revise its plan at the end of July by reducing the number of people to be assisted to 114 million instead of 181 million out of 300 million people in danger.

What will be the consequences? Mortality, exile and migration, despair, destabilization, radicalization?

While the risks of war are increasing, as well as the essential needs of populations in danger, humanitarian aid is dangerously falling.

In this edition, we continue our mission of information and mobilization with interviews on this subject with VOICE and CHD and on Syria, which I invite you to read and share.

The world’s agenda is changing. Défis Humanitaires must evolve its mission.

We are initiating this reflection by inviting you to participate in it in several ways.

By giving us your opinion on the changes in the world, its progress and its risks.

By telling us what you think of the magazine Défis Humanitaires and what developments you would like.

By proposing to us evolutions of the layout so that it gains in impact.

By participating in this project which has a cost to which you can contribute by making a donation today to Défis Humanitaires on HelloAsso. Donation entitling you to a tax deduction.

It is for you that we publish Défis Humanitaires and it is with you that we want to adapt the magazine to new challenges. I thank you and do not hesitate to write to me at contact@defishumanitaires.com and to make a donation on HelloAsso.

Alain Boinet

President of Défis Humanitaires