Harvard Humanitarian Initiative

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Issue in Focus

From Research to Policy Recommendations: Julia VanRooyen & PHR Visit the Hill

HHI Fellow, Dr. Julia VanRooyen briefed members of Congress on conditions in Darfur refugee camps. The brief followed the recent release of the Obama Administration's Sudan Policy Review. HHI and the Physicians for Human Rights released a report earlier this year on the subject titled: "Nowhere To Turn: Failure to Protect, Support and Assure Justice for Darfuri Women."

Homepage News

Characterizing Violence in the DRC 

Read our latest report on violence's implications for the protection of women in the DRC.  

2009 Humanitarian Action Summit Report Released  

The report presents challenges to humanitarian response and policy recommendations.

 
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Homepage Events

Armenian-Turkish Reconciliation: Routes Through Empowerment

Join HHI Monday, November 16th from 7-9PM in the Tsai Auditorium for this Inter-communal Violence and Reconciliation Project event.

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Partner Profiles

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Democratic Republic of Congo

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Background on Conflict in the Congo

The conflict in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) has claimed over five million lives since 1996, making it the deadliest conflict since World War II. While mass rape has been a feature of many civil and interstate conflicts, the violence in eastern DRC features unique and disturbing characteristics. In 2007, United Nations Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs John Holmes called rape in the DRC, "the worst in the world."

Tens of thousands of women have been raped or sexually mutilated. The uncommonly brutal nature of the crimes leads to a host of health problems for survivors: pregnancy, sexually transmitted disease (including HIV), and traumatic fistula – a condition that leaves women incontinent of urine, stool, or both. Many women and their children are abandoned by their husbands and communities and become homeless and destitute.

HHI's work is focused on identifying prevention and mitigation tactics that can protect Congolese women's health and human rights at the individual, community, and international levels.

 

Current Projects


  • Addressing Root Causes of Mass Rape
    In partnership with UN-OCHA, Open Society Institute, and Oxfam America, HHI research addresses the root causes and consequences of gender-based violence in eastern DRC. Recent research and recommendations by HHI investigators have shaped international policy and informed the humanitarian community's understanding of why mass atrocities occur. Particular investigations focus on:
    • Documenting survivors' needs for medical, psychosocial, and livelihood support;
    • Assessing community perceptions of sexual assault;
    • Evaluating the effectiveness of local and international service providers;
    • Tracking militia activity and understanding perpetrator motivation.
  • Capacity-Building for Local Clinics In May 2007, the Harvard Humanitarian Initiative (HHI) launched a pilot program to build the clinical capacity of Panzi Hospital in Bukavu, Democratic Republic of Congo. Although Panzi is a full service hospital, it is the region's main treatment center for victims of sexual abuse seeking surgical and medical treatment. The hospital accepts 10 to 12 new rape victims daily, and it is not uncommon for there to be 450 sexual assault victims admitted to the hospital at any given time. HHI's program, directed by Dr. Julia VanRooyen, focuses on training hospital personnel in complex pelvic repair procedures by sending U.S. gynecologic surgeons to work side-by-side with Congolese physicians.

Multimedia

For more stories and videos about HHI's work in the Democratic Republic of Congo, please visit our multimedia page.

 

Looking Horror in the Face

DRC History

DRC History

Jocelyn Kelly: Seeking the whole picture of Congo violence HHI-Panzi Partnership

HHI-Panzi Partnership

Jennifer Scott: Being there for atrocity's survivors

Data: L'Incident

Data: L'Incident

Local Partners Critical to HHI's Work Men with guns

Men with guns


Published Reports

jpg osi report

Characterizing Sexual Violence in the Democratic Republic of the Congo: Profiles of Violence, Community Responses, and Implications for the Protection of Women

 

This report uses both quantitative and qualitative methods to explore sexual violence in the Democratic Replublic of Congo.  Results from this report show the sexual violence perpetrated by armed actors in the DRC has features that indicate rape is being used as a weapon of war. The violence in DRC embodies a new kind of war emerging in the 21st century - one that occurs in villages more than battlefields and affects more civilians than armed combatants.

Gender Based Violence Blog

More information on HHI's research and on gender based violence in the DRC can be found on Research Coordinator Jocelyn Kelly's Change.org blog.

 

Lead Researchers

Michael VanRooyen, MD, MPH, FACEP
Director of GBV Program, Co-Director of Harvard Humanitarian Initiative

Jocelyn Kelly, MS
GBV Research Coordinator, Harvard Humanitarian Initiative

Susan Bartels, MD, MPH
Department of Emergency Medicine, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Harvard University

Sadia Hader, MD, MPH
Division Director of Family Planning, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

Jennifer Leaning, MD, SMH
Co-Director, Harvard Humanitarian Initiative

Jen Scott, MD, MBA
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

Julia VanRooyen, MD
Visiting Scientist, Harvard Humanitarian Initiative