Humanitarian actors often need to negotiate to gain access to populations affected by conflicts and other crises. While negotiating for access for humanitarian assistance is often challenging in and of itself, practitioners and organizations face a distinct set of issues in access negotiations that relate to protection. On 28 May, the second session of the webinar series on access and protection focused on challenges that practitioners face when trying to gain or maintain access for protection, whether negotiating directly for protection programming access or negotiating for humanitarian access in general while considering protection concerns. We were joined by a panel of experts who discussed some of the situations that practitioners face, including: - Authorities invite assistance but not protection: We are being actively invited by the authorities or gatekeepers to provide assistance, but not protection. - Reporting on protection concerns could limit access: We have access and have discovered protection issues. We now have to weigh reporting or advocacy on these issues versus having our access restricted. - Restricted channels for access: We are allowed to provide assistance and protection, but only through the channels of the government or an armed group. - Needs assessments cannot include protection: We are unable to include protection in our needs assessments for fear of restricted access, so we do not understand the needs of vulnerable populations.Read more about the event at https://phap.org/28may2020

Podden och tillhörande omslagsbild på den här sidan tillhör PHAP. Innehållet i podden är skapat av PHAP och inte av, eller tillsammans med, Poddtoppen.