Tacit engagement in humanitarian action: making sense of silence and secrecy in humanitarian negotiations

Abstract Secrecy and silence regarding the compromises and trade-offs made by frontline humanitarians in order to achieve access, protection, efficiency and legitimacy are a widely observable but underconceptualized phenomenon in humanitarian action. As a form of “tacit engagement”, it allows humani...

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Main Authors: Ayse Bala Akal, Kristina Roepstorff, Kristoffer Lidén
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2025-01-01
Series:Journal of International Humanitarian Action
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s41018-024-00161-w
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author Ayse Bala Akal
Kristina Roepstorff
Kristoffer Lidén
author_facet Ayse Bala Akal
Kristina Roepstorff
Kristoffer Lidén
author_sort Ayse Bala Akal
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Secrecy and silence regarding the compromises and trade-offs made by frontline humanitarians in order to achieve access, protection, efficiency and legitimacy are a widely observable but underconceptualized phenomenon in humanitarian action. As a form of “tacit engagement”, it allows humanitarian practitioners to operate in difficult settings but also implies lacking accountability, coordination and learning. There is thus a need for disentangling the productive and restraining effects of secrecy in this field. In this paper, we do so by conceptualizing these practices as forms of “tacit engagement” and relating them to political theory on secrecy and silence. Drawing on insights from expert consultations and qualitative interviews on humanitarian negotiations, we relate it to existing literatures on remote management, risk management and a culture of silence in humanitarian organizations more generally and humanitarian negotiations more specifically. In the conclusion, we work out the potentially productive and destructive effects of tacit engagement as an invitation to ethical assessment.
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institution Kabale University
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series Journal of International Humanitarian Action
spelling doaj-art-2cdb79c82c9b433cbacc7cd3f208ce282025-01-19T12:35:47ZengSpringerOpenJournal of International Humanitarian Action2364-34042025-01-0110111010.1186/s41018-024-00161-wTacit engagement in humanitarian action: making sense of silence and secrecy in humanitarian negotiationsAyse Bala Akal0Kristina Roepstorff1Kristoffer Lidén2Peace Research Institute Oslo (PRIO)Institute for International Law of Peace and Armed Conflict (IFHV), Ruhr University Bochum (RUB)Peace Research Institute Oslo (PRIO)Abstract Secrecy and silence regarding the compromises and trade-offs made by frontline humanitarians in order to achieve access, protection, efficiency and legitimacy are a widely observable but underconceptualized phenomenon in humanitarian action. As a form of “tacit engagement”, it allows humanitarian practitioners to operate in difficult settings but also implies lacking accountability, coordination and learning. There is thus a need for disentangling the productive and restraining effects of secrecy in this field. In this paper, we do so by conceptualizing these practices as forms of “tacit engagement” and relating them to political theory on secrecy and silence. Drawing on insights from expert consultations and qualitative interviews on humanitarian negotiations, we relate it to existing literatures on remote management, risk management and a culture of silence in humanitarian organizations more generally and humanitarian negotiations more specifically. In the conclusion, we work out the potentially productive and destructive effects of tacit engagement as an invitation to ethical assessment.https://doi.org/10.1186/s41018-024-00161-wHumanitarian actionHumanitarian negotiationsCulture of silence
spellingShingle Ayse Bala Akal
Kristina Roepstorff
Kristoffer Lidén
Tacit engagement in humanitarian action: making sense of silence and secrecy in humanitarian negotiations
Journal of International Humanitarian Action
Humanitarian action
Humanitarian negotiations
Culture of silence
title Tacit engagement in humanitarian action: making sense of silence and secrecy in humanitarian negotiations
title_full Tacit engagement in humanitarian action: making sense of silence and secrecy in humanitarian negotiations
title_fullStr Tacit engagement in humanitarian action: making sense of silence and secrecy in humanitarian negotiations
title_full_unstemmed Tacit engagement in humanitarian action: making sense of silence and secrecy in humanitarian negotiations
title_short Tacit engagement in humanitarian action: making sense of silence and secrecy in humanitarian negotiations
title_sort tacit engagement in humanitarian action making sense of silence and secrecy in humanitarian negotiations
topic Humanitarian action
Humanitarian negotiations
Culture of silence
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s41018-024-00161-w
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