06/18/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 06/18/2026 05:38
June 18, 2026
As humanitarian needs continue to rise amid tighter resources and increasingly complex operating environments, there is growing debate about how humanitarian action must evolve. On Tuesday, DAI convened leaders from across government, humanitarian organisations, civil society, and the private sector at the House of Lords to explore what these changes mean in practice.
The discussion raised important questions about local leadership, partnership, accountability, and the role of international actors in an increasingly complex world.
We were privileged to hear from Baroness Chapman, Sir Andrew Mitchell, Lord Bruce of Bennachie, Dr Jemilah Mahmood, Jeremy Konyndyk, Lena Mahgoub, Jamie McGoldrick, and Colum Wilson, whose experience spans humanitarian leadership, policy, diplomacy, finance, and operational delivery.
Baroness Chapman challenged participants to consider what a humanitarian system fit for today's realities and tomorrow's challenges should look like. Sir Andrew Mitchell highlighted the importance of transparency and demonstrating the impact of investments in humanitarian response.
The conversation moved beyond familiar discussions of reform. Local leadership is not simply a future ambition. In many crisis-affected settings, local actors, community networks, diaspora groups, and frontline responders are already sustaining systems before international actors arrive and long after they leave.
The challenge is to recognise, connect, resource, and strengthen the capacity that already exists.
Several themes stood out:
The discussion also raised practical questions about investing more directly in local actors, recognising the role of diaspora networks and local investors, expanding anticipatory action, and strengthening resilience where the risk of future humanitarian need is greatest.
These questions do not have simple answers, but they will be central to shaping the future of humanitarian action and determining how humanitarian, development, climate, and peacebuilding actors work together in the years ahead.
These are some initial reflections from a rich and timely conversation, and we are grateful to all panellists and participants who contributed.
We look forward to sharing more insights from the discussion in the coming weeks as we continue exploring how new models of partnership can support both effective crisis response and longer-term resilience.