Our Research

The RIAH Consortium has produced the following publications and reports.

Publication: Soins, coercition et genre dans la guerre révolutionnaire au Népal (1996-2006)

This article explores the issue of gender-based medical care and wartime violence during the Maoist insurgency and the Nepalese civil war (1996-2006).

Publication: Soins, coercition et genre dans la guerre révolutionnaire au Népal (1996-2006)

Commentary published on Gaza

RIAH consortium members publish a commentary piece with other colleagues on how the absence of respect for existing safeguards for healthcare workers in Gaza is an integral aspect of the intentional disintegration of the Palestinian healthcare system.

Commentary published on Gaza

Publication: “It’s normal to be afraid”

RIAH researchers present the qualitative study on attacks
on healthcare in Ouaka, Haute-Kotto, and Vakaga prefectures of the Central African
Republic, 2016–2020

Publication: “It’s normal to be afraid”

Publication: “I will take part in the revolution with our people”

RIAH colleagues publish on the qualitative study of healthcare workers’ experiences of violence and resistance after the 2021 Myanmar coup d’etat

Publication: “I will take part in the revolution with our people”

Publication: Intimacy and the gendering of war healthcare

RIAH colleagues discuss women’s experiences of insurgent warfare, with special reference to the conflict in Nepal between 1996 and 2006.

Publication: Intimacy and the gendering of war healthcare

Humanity Special Issue Out

This issue features two papers from the RIAH consortium: one on history writing and attacks on healthcare, and a second on our case study in Nepal.

Humanity Special Issue Out

Case Study Report on impacts in the DRC

The study aimed to measure how these attacks affected health care accessibility for pregnant women and children under five, employing a mixed-methods approach. The report is also available in French via IRC's website.

Case Study Report on impacts in the DRC

Publication: impacts on female workers

Results of our second study in Colombia show that impacts of attacks affect negatively the professional and personal life of the female workers and are aggravated by structural violence with little or no institutional response.

Publication: impacts on female workers

Comment piece

Have attacks on healthcare become the new normal? Colleagues from the RIAH consortium issue a public health call to action for armed conflicts before it is too late.

Comment piece

Publication: Colombia Case Study

“There is a fear that you will be attacked just for the act of working in health”. In this publication, RIAH colleagues discuss our survey of experiences of violence against healthcare in Colombia.

Publication:  Colombia Case Study

RIAH Research Brief 02/2023

'What do we Learn from the History of Attacks on Healthcare?': The latest in a series of briefs intended to make findings from our research available to a broader audience.

RIAH Research Brief 02/2023

Publication: Caring Under Fire

This article analyses how military attacks and instances of violence impacted on the psychological, emotional and physical health of those attending the wounded within the Hadfield Spears mobile unit in the second world war.

Publication: Caring Under Fire