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Posts by Abby Stoddard

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Meta and YouTube Found Negligent in Landmark Social Media Addiction Case

Important decision. It's not the speech, it's the algos that cause harm (social as well as personal). Get 'em on that. www.nytimes.com/2026/03/25/t...

3 weeks ago 0 0 0 0
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The ethics of impossible decisions How do you make the right choice when all the options are bad? There’s a tool for navigating humanitarian dilemmas.

How does your organization approach decisions where every option causes harm? I wrote about it for The New Humanitarian lnkd.in/eXMGg5Z5

1 month ago 0 1 0 0
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Resist and Unsubscribe

Are you ready to resist and unsubscribe? www.resistandunsubscribe.com

Reply with a video, or call us at 855-51-PIVOT telling us what you decided to unsubscribe from!

2 months ago 104 54 23 31
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Just months after the August earthquake killing thousands in #Afghanistan, the country is faced with a 2nd devastating quake. Our new report on the response to the first event questions how the country could respond to another. Read the full report here -
humanitarianoutcomes.org/Afghanistan_...

5 months ago 5 1 0 0
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Data Rescue Projects receives support from the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation to support data rescue efforts FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Since launching in February 2025, the Data Rescue Project has grown substantially. At this point, the DRP has enabled the rescue of more than 1,000 datasets from US Federal…

The John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation has generously awarded us funding to secure our own storage. This critical processing space will be instrumental in ensuring that large datasets can be temporarily stored, curated, and described.

Thank you, MacArthur Foundation, for your support!

5 months ago 74 20 0 8

Detentions/arrests of aid workers have become more common than kidnappings. I’m not convinced that humanitarian security management, crisis response mechanisms, and insurance carriers are prepared for the reality where the perpetrator is the state.

5 months ago 2 0 0 0

The first World Humanitarian Day was marked in 2009, a year when 113 aid workers died in attacks. Last year the toll was 383, and 2025 may break the record again. With states now the majority perpetrators, it’s hard not to see these numbers as a bellwether for the state of IHL and the global order.

8 months ago 2 0 0 0

Air drops will bring more chaos, danger and indignity. Let the aid in overland, to be distributed safely by experienced humanitarian providers. Enforce the laws of war.

8 months ago 13 8 0 1
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The Trump Administration Is About to Incinerate 500 Tons of Emergency Food Federal workers warned for months that the high-energy biscuits would go to waste.

"Five months into its unprecedented dismantling of foreign-aid programs, the Trump administration has given the order to incinerate food instead of sending it to people who need it"
@hana-kiros.bsky.social, on spending $130,000 to burn food worth $800,000
www.theatlantic.com/health/archi...

9 months ago 4481 3208 361 620
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The data streams that underpin humanitarian response are about to collapse Famine warning, needs assessments, health data: Humanitarian action will be groping in the dark if vital data sources are allowed to crumble.

We may never know the true impact of the US foreign aid cuts, since losing the funding also means losing the ability to measure. Some colleagues and I wrote about the threat to humanitarian data. @newhumanitarian.bsky.social

1 year ago 13 7 0 0
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A Lethal Mystery Illness Is Spreading in Congo. USAID Cuts Have Slowed the Response Gutting USAID is already having a devastating impact around the world. In the Democratic Republic of Congo, teams that would normally be racing to identify a fatal sickness are gone.

"Medical staff along the Uganda–DRC border have been terminated. Soldiers are everywhere. The laboratory built to deal with zoonotic diseases with US funding is empty."

www.wired.com/story/race-t...

1 year ago 488 272 16 30

Whatever humanitarian system emerges from the one that is currently collapsing will need to be built and maintained by nation-state funding, with larger economies footing most of the bill, as is logical and appropriate. 6/6

1 year ago 4 1 1 0

Insurance, whether risk-pooling, catastrophe bonds, or sovereign risk transfer schemes, needs governments to act as premium payers, reinsurers, or backstop funders. The reality is that most humanitarian crises—especially conflicts—are not insurable through standard private-sector risk models. 5/6

1 year ago 3 0 1 0

But what about innovative financing mechanisms? These are promising and important, but at their core, they all reduce to insurance models. The insurance schemes needed at this scale ultimately still rely on state participation:... 4/6

1 year ago 0 0 1 0

Philanthropy is also not the answer. Bill Gates has said that while philanthropies can innovate and take risks, they cannot replace central role of the state in meeting human needs. It is states that have the mandate and the compelling interest in human welfare and a stable global system. 3/6

1 year ago 0 0 1 0

The private sector can't replace the role of states in humanitarian aid. Corporates can and do contribute, their capacity is constrained by market logic: their obligation is to shareholders, so could never prioritize unprofitable interventions, such as aid to conflict zones or protracted crises. 2/6

1 year ago 0 0 2 0

Yes, the humanitarian sector was dependent on the US and is in crisis now owing to this single point of failure. But it is unavoidable that the nation representing >25% of the global economy should provide at least that share of relief aid. Global emergency response requires state contributions. 1/6

1 year ago 5 1 1 1
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There are now 204 local and national humanitarian NGOs reporting program reductions. This is 79% of all survey respondents from 36 countries.

1 year ago 2 4 0 0

Other donor governments will not be able to fill the USAID hole, but should coordinate and collectively triage where to allocate additional emergency funding. The strategy must consider security resourcing for the remaining (mainly local) aid actors.

1 year ago 2 0 0 0

This will be happening in many places. Unpaid vendors, desperate communities cutoff from aid, and no budget for security will drive more security incidents-until there are no more aid operations remaining to attack.

1 year ago 8 4 1 0
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Trump administration cuts most USAID programs. And, the ethics of leaving your job Nearly all USAID programs have been eliminated. One official says it's a "global health massacre." And, a federal judge will hear arguments over the decision to fire thousands of probationary workers.

7. Over 1,000 food kitchens in Sudan, a country with almost 25 million people experiencing acute food insecurity – terminated. www.npr.org/2025/02/27/g...

1 year ago 1593 430 8 7

These reports continue to come in from L/NNGOs. Many of them won't survive. The defunding crisis may ultimately give birth to a more localized humanitarian system, as some optimistically posit, but right now it sure feels like the opposite: local response capacities are the first to be obliterated.

1 year ago 2 0 0 0
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USAID Lifesaving Aid Remains Halted Despite Rubio’s Promise A new directive puts further exemptions on hold. Aid workers also say the U.S. government has made it impossible to pay partners around the world.

Top USAID officials are trying to create a false narrative that life-saving aid has continued despite Trump’s blanket halt to foreign aid. Our @nytimes.com reporting shows the exact opposite. USAID even issued an internal email to stop applications for waivers: www.nytimes.com/2025/02/12/u...

1 year ago 1324 607 31 26

One local NGO survey respondent in Mali reports the compelled "cessation of protection services: 26,207 people including 7,913 adult women, 4,412 adult men + 13,882 children."

1 year ago 2 1 0 0
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In addition to the numbers, we are gathering statements from these local NGOs. One from Haiti that supported victims of armed gangs in an IDP camp: "We were forced to stop all ongoing activities with the children. The women and children were displaced to makeshift camps in Port-au-Prince."

1 year ago 0 0 0 0
Protection of civilians in armed conflict
Protection of civilians in armed conflict YouTube video by Humanitarian Outcomes

When @abbystoddard.bsky.social briefed the SC in November, the # of aid worker fatalities in 2024 had reached 282. In the current defunding crisis, she expects violent incidents may rise initially and then fall, as many programs stop completely and there are fewer people delivering aid.

1 year ago 5 5 1 0
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With crucial datasets now going dark, it is important that the Aid Worker Security Database, and all others that can, #keepcounting

1 year ago 1 1 0 0
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Trump Administration Live Updates: Judge Pauses Job Cuts at USAID

It pays to push back in the courts. NGO boards, take note.

1 year ago 0 0 0 0
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Trump administration sued by government workers over cuts to USAID The largest U.S. government workers' union and an association of foreign service workers sued the Trump administration on Thursday in an effort to reverse its aggressive dismantling of the U.S. Agency for International Development.

The largest US government workers' union and an association of foreign service workers sued the Trump administration in an effort to reverse its aggressive dismantling of the US Agency for International Development reut.rs/41fBb9n

1 year ago 1042 204 19 12

Important piece by @sara-pantuliano.bsky.social. The lynchpin of the humanitarian system has been removed, and it is collapsing. But if other governments' humanitarian arms can be mobilized, it can be built back better. We must not "wait and see" for too long.

1 year ago 5 3 0 0