Research and Studies

Need and Greed: Corruption Risks, Perceptions and Prevention in Humanitarian Assistance

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Emergency environments present unique

corruption risks for agencies operating within

them. Relief is delivered amidst weak or absent

rule of law, endemic corruption and immense

need. The capacities of governments and

humanitarian agencies to assist affected people

are stretched to the limit, and agencies are

under pressure to intervene rapidly. Assistance

is injected into resource-poor settings where

powerful people have disproportionate control

over resources. In the case of armed conflicts,

predatory economies often develop when

influential groups attempt to direct these

resources for their own ends.

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