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IASC Principals' Statement, 'Zero Tolerance on Sexual Harassment and Abuse in the Humanitarian Sector', 2017

Document Type
IASC Statement
Product Category
Protection from Sexual Exploitation and Abuse
Published Date
Subsequent to their ad-hoc meeting of 15th March 2017, the IASC Principals endorsed this statement, outlining their concern and commitments around incidents of discrimination, sexual harassment, and sexual abuse perpetrated against female aid workers by their colleagues in the workplace revealed by a Humanitarian Women’s Network survey.
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IASC Principals' Joint Statement on Syria, 2016

Document Type
IASC Statement
Product Category
Humanitarian Access
Published Date
In response to apparent easing of the conflict in Syria in March 2016, the IASC Principals issued this collective call for peace and an end to suffering, including through improved humanitarian access.
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IASC Principals' Statement on Protection Against Sexual Exploitation and Abuse, 2015

Document Type
IASC Statement
Product Category
Protection from Sexual Exploitation and Abuse
Published Date
On 11 December 2015, the IASC Principals adopted a statement affirming their commitment to actively prevent and respond to sexual exploitation and abuse by humanitarian workers, and the role of the PSEA Senior Focal Points, Humanitarian Coordinators, and the Humanitarian Country Teams to implement this commitment in all humanitarian response operations. They re-affirmed their determination to eradicate acts of sexual exploitation and abuse by their personnel and actively respond to incidents that are perpetuated against their beneficiaries.  
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IASC Principals Statement, The Centrality of Protection in Humanitarian Action, 2013

Document Type
IASC Statement
Product Category
Protection
Published Date
This statement affirms the commitment of the IASC Principals to ensuring the centrality of protection in humanitarian action and the role of Humanitarian Coordinators, Humanitarian Country Teams and Clusters to implement this commitment in all aspects of humanitarian action. It is part of a number of measures that are meant to ensure more effective protection of people in humanitarian crises.
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IASC Letter to UNFCCC, 30 April 2009

Document Type
IASC Statement
Product Category
Climate Change
Published Date
Heads of the IASC letter to the Executive Secretary of UNFCC highlighting the humanitarian implications of humanitarian change.
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IASC Statement of Commitment: Action to address Gender-based Violence in Emergencies, 2004

Document Type
IASC Statement
Product Category
Gender
Published Date
Sexual violence is being systematically and rampantly used in conflict situations as a method of war to brutalize and instilinstill fear in the civilian population, especially women and girls. The individual and collective responsibility to respect the highest standards of the law and to fully comply with the UN Secretary-General’s Bulletin on Special Measures for Protection from Sexual Exploitation and Sexual Abuse (ST/SGB/2003/13) must be re-emphasized.
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Statement Attributable to the IASC and UNAIDS - Worsening Impact of HIV-AIDS on Food Security and Human Survival in Southern Africa, 2003

Document Type
IASC Statement
Product Category
Health
Published Date
AIDS kills young adults, especially women, who are the backbone of their families and communities. It leaves behind orphans in large numbers with few prospects for a healthy future. Entire communities are collapsing under the strain of caring for the ill while maintaining productive livelihoods. Problems in governance, lack of appropriate agricultural policies and pervasiveness of poverty all contribute towards compounding the effects of the severe drought.
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Statement by the IASC at the Meeting of State Parties on the Convention on Prohibitions or Restrictions on the Use of Certain Conventional Weapons: A Call for a Freeze on the Use of Cluster Munitions, 2003

Document Type
IASC Statement
Product Category
Protection
Published Date
An estimated five to 30 percent of cluster munitions fail to explode when fired or dropped, either penetrating below the ground on impact, or remaining on the surface. Those underground can seriously impede the safe cultivation of land and the development of infrastructure. From a humanitarian worker’s perspective, it is essential that Explosive Remnants of War (ERW) pollution be limited. Parties to conflict must be held accountable for the use, the clean-up and the long term effects of the weapons they employ.
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IASC Statement on the Humanitarian Crisis in Southern Africa, 2002

Document Type
IASC Statement
Product Category
Health
Published Date
The Inter-Agency Standing Committee (IASC) expresses its concern that a number of countries within southern Africa will require a significant increase in humanitarian assistance in 2002. The present food security situation in the region is the worst since 1992 when effective collaboration among Governments, SADC, humanitarian partners and donors averted famine in the face of a devastating drought. Today, ten years later, the factors contributing to the crisis are numerous and vary from country to country.