Interplay between sanctions, donor conditionality, and food insecurity in complex emergencies: the case of Syria

Publication date

2025-01

Authors

Kanfash, Mohammad

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article

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License

taverne

Abstract

Thirteen years into conflict, Syria remains one of the world's major humanitarian crises. Food insecurity has reached unprecedented levels in the country, with millions of civilians facing starvation and hunger. The key drivers of this are conflict-related, nature-induced, and, importantly, man-made policies. Semi-comprehensive sanctions against the country and donor conditionality vis-à-vis humanitarian operators' work are prime examples of the latter. These policies are inextricably linked with food insecurity in Syria and have direct and indirect impacts on it. Understanding the ongoing crisis as a complex emergency, this paper examines the interplay between sanctions, donor conditionality, and food insecurity, an understudied subject in the Syrian context. It explores how sanctions and donor conditionality influence three key dimensions of food security, namely, availability, affordability and economic access, and utilisation, and subsequently worsen the conditions confronting the Syrian population. The paper contributes to discussions on food security in conflict settings and how sanctions negatively affect civilians in targeted countries.

Keywords

complex emergencies, donor conditionality, food (in)security, sanctions, General Social Sciences, General Earth and Planetary Sciences, SDG 2 - Zero Hunger

Citation

Kanfash, M 2025, 'Interplay between sanctions, donor conditionality, and food insecurity in complex emergencies : the case of Syria', Disasters, vol. 49, no. 1, e12656. https://doi.org/10.1111/disa.12656