Launching Choose to Invest FY2025
The answer is clear: for less than 1% of the federal budget, the United States’ global development and humanitarian assistance can lift millions of people out of poverty, end extreme hunger, protect human rights, build resilience, and promote responsive democratic governance—all while advancing core American values and economic and security interests.
Launching InterAction’s “Big Think” on U.S. Global Food Security Response
In 2020, the number of people unable to afford a healthy diet around the world rose by 112 million to…
Launching the Human Rights Framework for Preventing and Responding to Sexual Exploitation, Abuse, and Harassment
International Women’s Day provides us the opportunity to reflect on the progress made and challenges that remain in achieving gender…
Leading Humanitarian, Development, and Global Health Organizations Urge Congress to Reject Cuts to Foreign Assistance
Leading humanitarian, development, and global health organizations are calling on Members of Congress to protect the International Affairs budget in Fiscal Year 2020 (FY20) despite the Administration’s proposed 24 percent cuts.
Let’s Step Up on Foreign Aid to Fund Our Values
Despite the Administration’s repeated efforts to gut foreign aid, Congress has proven a bulwark against those dangerous proposals, restoring funding.
Localization in the COVID-19 Era
While it is still unknown how COVID-19 will ultimately change the development and humanitarian aid sectors, the current crisis has…
Looking to the Past to Preserve the Future: Commemorating the 70th Anniversary of the Geneva Conventions
In the aftermath of World War II, States sought to strengthen the preservation of humanity in times of war.
MIIS-InterAction Scholarship
InterAction has forged a partnership with the Middlebury Institute of International Studies at Monterey (MIIS) to offer a $25,000 scholarship to staff of InterAction member organizations.
Mainstreaming Housing, Land, and Property in Crisis Response
HLP is crucial to crisis preparedness and response, peacebuilding, and development, yet it is often overlooked as a technical niche rather than an essential component of successful humanitarian assistance.