Counter-terrorism laws: what aid agencies need to know

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6 November 2014, 14:00-16:00 GMT

Venue: Overseas Development Institute, London (directions)
and screened live online

Do aid workers risk violating counter-terrorism laws to reach people who need humanitarian support?

Counter-terrorism laws and humanitarian action share several goals, including the prevention of attacks against civilians and of the diversion of aid to armed actors. Yet tensions between these two areas of law and policy have emerged in recent years, resulting in challenges for governments and humanitarian actors. 

This event launches Network Paper 79, Counter-terrorism laws and regulations: what aid agencies need to know, published by the Humanitarian Practice Network with the Counter-terrorism and Humanitarian Engagement Project at the Harvard Law School (part of the Program on International Law and Armed Conflict). Speakers will present key findings from the paper, engage the audience in an exercise which will address key challenges that anti-terrorism laws and regulations pose for humanitarian action and explore how humanitarian actors might respond to these challenges. 

To register for this event please visit the event webpage or email hpn@odi.org. You can also follow #Counterterrorism on Twitter for live coverage.

Refreshments will be available from 16:00

Speakers:

Naz K. Modirzadeh – Director, Harvard Law School Program on International Law and Armed Conflict (via video-link)

Dustin Lewis  – Senior Researcher, Harvard Law School Program on International Law and Armed Conflict (via video-link)

Mike Parkinson – Policy Advisor, Oxfam GB

Abdurahman Sharif – Operations Manager, Muslim Charities Forum

Chair:

Sara Pantuliano  Director, Humanitarian Policy Group