 |
History
Humanitarian organizations send their
staff overseas to the most challenging conflict areas, disaster zones, and
impoverished communities. These individuals, as well as local staff, often
find themselves in need of psychosocial support due to trauma or chronic
stress. Many organizations, however, do not have the capacity to provide
this kind of support to their people before, during, and after their
deployment.
In 2002 Action Without Borders was approached with the
idea of convening a group of people wrestling with these issues, and in
March of 2004, after almost two years of planning with experts in the
field, AWB organized a national conference under the title: "Tending the
Helper’s Fire: Mitigating Trauma and Stress in International Staff and
Volunteers."
Hosted by Notre Dame University’s Kroc Institute, the
conference was the first in the U.S. to bring together human resources
professionals, researchers, program directors, and international
humanitarian aid workers to examine how different organizations currently
provide psychosocial support to their overseas staff,and how they can do
so more effectively.
Participants in the conference agreed that
there is a great need for an online resource center devoted to the broad
range of psychosocial support issues. This new site –
psychosocial.org - connects humanitarian experts, aid workers, and
academics, and provides them with the training materials, best practices,
and research results needed to support their work.
All photos © Karl Grobl
|
|