Do Humanitarians get paid? Salaries for humanitarians run the gamut. Entry-level workers in the humanitarian fieldoften make $25,000 annually, while employees in upper-management positions sometimes make $100,000 or more a year, according to the University of Colorado Boulder's Career Services d...
What I believe matters is that fact that we are all (from volunteers to directors, from field staff to HQ administrators) part of something greater and bigger than our jobs, we are supporting “the cause”, and that at regardless of our level on the pay-scale. Without HQ grant and admin...
The shift marks the first time that the World Bank's own funds would be sent to Afghanistan since the Taliban seized power in August 2021. Since then, the ARTF has channeled $1.5 billion in donor aid through partner organizations to benefit some 25 million Afghans. The IDA fund disburses ...
In other words, Liberman was attempting to argue in 2018 that simply using a drone in airspace the IDF happens to be operating in is enough to make you a legitimate target – a legal argument that is worrisome indeed for the many reporters, humanitarian aid workers, and other civilians who...
Here’s my entry for Six Word Saturday: I WAS HUNGRY, YOU FED ME. The man slowly looked up at the woman. Her coat was new. She looked as if she had never missed a meal in her life. A woman clearly accustomed to the finer things in life. ...
Job responsibilities that show up on a lot of G-level positions that you can learn through leadership volunteering and through most administrative jobs at nonprofits and local government agencies as well: Schedule internal and external meetings and events, and communicate these dates, or possible date...
so those who volunteer with INJM take the jobs that simply need to be done. Sometimes volunteers may work with other organizations, be they other foreign aid organizations or local community efforts, going wherever they’re told, to do what they are requested to do, as best they can so so...
Furthermore, Arabic and entry level Islamic courses have been introduced to the general public education curriculum as elective courses starting from primary level onward. Cinoglu (2006) argues that the public education in Turkey is not designed to meet the needs of a diverse society. A response...