How do humanitarian negotiators understand, apply, and negotiate humanitarian principles in today’s complex operational environments? What happens when principles such as neutrality, impartiality, independence, and humanity come into tension with access, operational survival, donor pressures, or security concerns?
Drawing on CCHN’s two-part research series on Humanitarian Principles in Negotiation, this webinar will present key findings from interviews with humanitarian negotiators, senior humanitarian leaders, donors, and practitioners across multiple crisis contexts. The research explores both the frontline negotiation perspective and the organisational systems that enable—or constrain—principled humanitarian action.
Together, we will explore:
- How humanitarian principles are understood and interpreted in negotiation contexts
- How organisations translate humanitarian principles into operational practice
- The tensions that arise when principles meet institutional, political, and operational constraints
- How negotiators and organisations navigate difficult trade-offs and compromises
- How humanitarian principles are perceived by authorities, armed groups, and affected communities
- Practical lessons and reflections for strengthening principled humanitarian negotiation
This webinar aims to share practical findings from the research and create space for reflection among practitioners working to uphold humanitarian principles in increasingly complex environments.
Language: English (AI-supported live Zoom translation will be available in multiple languages. You can check the list of supported languages here)
Date: Thursday, 11 June 2026 10:00 AM – 11:30 AM (Geneva time)
Location: online (Zoom) – the link will be sent once your participation is confirmed.
Cost: Free of charge
This event is open to everyone.
Registration Deadline: 10 June 2026

