International Humanitarian Affairs – Fordham Now https://now.fordham.edu The official news site for Fordham University. Tue, 19 Nov 2024 21:28:16 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://now.fordham.edu/wp-content/uploads/2015/01/favicon.png International Humanitarian Affairs – Fordham Now https://now.fordham.edu 32 32 232360065 Like Mother, Like Daughter: Helping Those in Need https://now.fordham.edu/living-the-mission/like-mother-like-daughter-helping-those-in-need/ Mon, 21 Dec 2015 17:00:00 +0000 http://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=36383 Kara Lightburn wasn’t shopping on Fifth Avenue this holiday season.

“When it comes to the materialistic part of the holiday season, I can’t handle it,” she said. “I’ve changed.”

Lightburn recently flew into New York from Haiti, where she is helping Dominicans of Haitian ancestry who have been pouring over the border into Haiti from the Dominican Republic. In 2013 the Dominican government ordered that the group must prove Dominican lineage with ancestral birth certificates dating from before 1929, or be expelled. An estimated 200,000 people may become stateless.

Lightburn said that the mere act of traveling home for the holidays has taken on a new meaning.

“I see how restricted other people are in traveling,” she said. “The people there are dealing with the statelessness and no visas.”

On returning to New York, Lightburn sat on a panel held at Fordham to discuss the crisis. Before the event, she checked in with colleagues from the Institute of International Humanitarian Affairs (IIHA), where she is pursuing her master’s degree, and then met with her mother, Anita Lightburn, PhD, a professor in the Graduate School of Social Service and director of the Beck Institute on Religion and Poverty.

The two discussed their shared interest in helping those in need—Professor Lightburn through social work and Kara Lightburn through humanitarian aid—though Professor Lightburn continually deflected attention from her work to that of her daughter.

“Being on the ground and doing the work that Kara does is a whole different thing than me organizing people to understand social justice issues and respond,” she said.

While she has seen her share of human frailty over the years, the professor recognized that her daughter’s experience in Haiti is distinct. Kara began going to Haiti to help out after the 2010 earthquake. That year, she founded Social Tap, a New York-based nonprofit providing services through Haitian partnerships.

“She’s like her father in that she really goes out on the edge, has a vision for what could be, and then she goes ahead and does it,” Lightburn said. “She’s never taken a salary, never funded herself. Everything she gets she gives away.”

But Kara said she learned how to organize disparate parties toward a common goal by observing her mother and her colleagues.

“Because of my mother, I was always surrounded by amazing, powerful women who were intellectually challenging,” she said. “I learned how to tap into the university systems because I grew up in them and learned how to work with multiple institutions.”

Her first time on the ground in a disaster came after a friend was killed in the Sri Lanka tsunami. She said she felt “compelled to go.” She raised money through her college classmates. Professor Lightburn recalls it as a harrowing time for her as a mother, particularly after Kara told her that gun-toting rebels greeted her at the airport.

“I called colleagues who assured me that the areas where she was going were not too violent,” Professor Lightburn said. “When she called me later she was helping rebuild a fishing village and she said, ‘I’ve never been happier in my whole life.’”

After the earthquake in Haiti, Kara Lightburn had to go beyond helping people attain basic needs, like shelter, food, and water. She also had to arrange security for women and children who were being raped amid the chaos. Among the victims was a 4-year-old girl.

“We worked with the camp leaders and organized security committees,” she said. “We also made sure the victims knew that we would pursue every line of justice for the perpetrators.”

Kara Lightburn said that while her mother’s work differs from her own, each one’s work boils down to strengthening communities.

“Community is community. It’s the same if it’s international or local,” she said.

“The other thing we absolutely share is the belief in the dignity of everybody,” said Professor Lightburn. “We’re really not that different; each of us brings different gifts.”

“But the number one thing we do in both of our professions is listen to people and walk with them,” said Kara Lightburn.

“And act with them,” added Professor Lightburn.

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In the Media: Fordham’s Alexander van Tulleken stresses humanity in U.S. ebola case https://now.fordham.edu/politics-and-society/in-the-media-fordhams-alexander-van-tulleken-stresses-humanity-in-u-s-ebola-case/ Mon, 06 Oct 2014 19:15:33 +0000 http://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=39682
The IIHA’s Alexander van Tulleken M.D.

Whether through its International Diploma in Humanitarian Assistance for those already in the field, or its undergraduate or master’s degree program for those who hope to work in the field, the goal of Fordham’s Institute for International Humanitarian Affairs is a serious one.

The institute aims to “educate a humanitarian workforce that will break the pattern of familiar mistakes,” such as paternalism, marginalization, or a top-down manner of doing things that hinders rather than helps.

In recent days, the public has seen the IIHA’s pedagogy in practice through Alexander van Tulleken, M.D., IIHA’s Helen Hamlyn Senior Fellow. who has been a mainstay in the media during the current Ebola epidemic. Van Tulleken has done countless interviews since the news about the ebola epidemic caught fire in the Western media, and more so when the first case of Ebola was diagnosed in the United States on Sept. 30.

On Oct. 3, when CNN’s Ashleigh Banfield asked van Tulleken about the four people close to the Texas man diagnosed with Ebola, who are now being forcibly quarantined in a Dallas apartment, he espoused the Jesuit value of homines pro aliis (men and women for others):

“You get a sense of the lack of humanity at the way they’re treating this family. You feel it’s not a nice way of dealing with it,” van Tulleken said. “You want to is make it easy for that family. They need someone bringing them food, they need someone bringing them linen. They need a task force of people making it easy for them to stay at home.

“The reason I say it’s sinister when you hear about the legal enforcement [is because]when that’s the main tool, that isn’t going to work for large numbers of people, and that’s what worries me.”

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Expert on Transnational Justice to Speak at Fordham https://now.fordham.edu/law/expert-on-transnational-justice-to-speak-at-fordham/ Fri, 21 Mar 2014 18:31:33 +0000 http://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=40180 The killing of six Jesuits, their housekeeper and her daughter in November 1989 was one of the most horrific episodes of the Salvadoran Civil War, and one in which the perpetrators were long left untouched by justice.

On Tuesday evening, Almudena Bernabeu will detail how she helped right that wrong, via a landmark court case filed in 2008 against senior Salvadoran officials for their role in the massacre.

Tuesday, March 25

7 p.m.

E. Gerald Corrigan Center-12th Floor Lounge, Lowenstein Center, Lincoln Center Building

Bernabeu, director of transitional justice at the San Francisco–based Center for Justice and Accountability, also led CJA’s work in Spain in a recent genocide trial against former Guatemalan president Efrain Rios Montt.

His conviction in May, 2013 of overseeing the deliberate killings by the armed forces of at least 1,771 members of the Maya Ixil population during his 1982-83 rule was the first time in history that a head of state was sentenced for genocide in a national court.

Bernabeu’s talk is co-sponsored by the Columbia University Seminar on Latin America and Fordham’s Latin American and Latino Studies Institute (LALSI) and Institute of International Humanitarian Affairs (IIHA).

For more information, contact Hector Lindo-Fuentes at (212) 636-6361.

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International Humanitarian Assistance Diploma Program https://now.fordham.edu/education-and-social-services/international-humanitarian-assistance-diploma-program/ Tue, 12 Jun 2001 18:15:43 +0000 http://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=39285 No matter how much goodwill a humanitarian may have, the absence of international protocols makes the prospect of addressing global atrocities, such as genocide, a daunting task. To prepare those in the field of humanitarian assistance for such difficult undertakings, the Center for International Health and Cooperation (CIHC) is offering an International Diploma in Humanitarian Assistance.

Throughout the month of June, Fordham University’s International Humanitarian Affairs Program is hosting the intensive program, during which 40 students will spend 14 hours a day, six days a week, collaborating on effective approaches in handling a variety of humanitarian crises, such as famine and epidemics.

Those involved in humanitarian efforts often shift from agency to agency, where there has been a lack of common protocols, such as how to properly handle to a hostage situation. To build universal standards, the interdisciplinary program employs officials from the United Nations, non-governmental organizations and volunteers to create a model program with intensity that mirrors the rigor of a humanitarian crisis.

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