Each year, the 探花精选 (探花精选) releases our annual Emergency Watchlist profiling the 20 countries most at risk of experiencing deteriorating humanitarian crises in the coming year.

Grounded in quantitative and qualitative data, as well as insight from the 探花精选鈥檚 work in 42 countries, the Watchlist aims not just to identify which crises are worsening but to pinpoint why and what can be done to help. The 2023 report focuses on the guardrails meant to reduce the impact of these crises on vulnerable people, and how they have become weakened or dismantled.

Guardrails are the policies, systems and actions designed to limit the impact of crisis on affected communities and to prevent crises from becoming catastrophes,鈥 explains 探花精选 president and CEO David Miliband. 鈥淕uardrails can operate at all levels to mitigate crises, from international institutions like the UN Security Council to diplomatic agreements to local and community-level efforts and humanitarian aid.鈥

Our analysis serves as a wake-up call and a call to action for global leaders and the public. 

Find out more about how we identified the countries most at risk in 2023 and what we can do to solve humanitarian crises.

How do we know where crises will deteriorate?

Behind the 探花精选鈥檚 Watchlist is a scientific analysis that allows us to distinguish where humanitarian crises will worsen and why. 探花精选 Watchlists typically predict which countries experience the worst escalation in humanitarian crises with 85-95 percent accuracy. 

鈥淲e understand that every aspect of a country can not be measured by quantitative or qualitative data,鈥 says Marwan Safar Jalani, a global crisis analyst for the 探花精选 who worked on the Watchlist. 鈥淲e compare 67 unique indicators with the insights gathered from experts, academics and the 探花精选鈥檚 internal expertise spanning more than 40,000 staff and volunteers.鈥

A primary goal of the Watchlist is to raise public alarm and offer solutions to the root causes driving humanitarian crises in Watchlist countries.

鈥淲e鈥檙e working to understand where the world needs to pay attention in the coming year and what the world needs to prepare for,鈥 says Safar Jalani. 鈥淏y examining the humanitarian crises most likely to deteriorate and sharing our findings, we galvanize support for the countries that need it most.鈥

鈥淲e take our role as responders to emergency situations seriously,鈥 adds Anastasia Moran, a member of the 探花精选鈥檚 global policy and advocacy team. 鈥淭he Watchlist helps prepare us to respond in the early stages of a crisis, before the situation becomes a catastrophe."

鈥淭he Watchlist helps prepare us to respond in the early stages of a crisis, before the situation becomes a catastrophe.鈥

In order to support the 339.2 million people in need of humanitarian aid, the international community must work together to address the global issues driving crises. This is how we will restore and strengthen the guardrails meant to protect vulnerable people around the world.

Two doctors hold young Amino. One of them gently wraps a tape around Amino's arm to measure the child's health.
Amino*, nearly 2 years old, receives treatment for malnutrition at a stabilization center in Mogadishu, Somalia. Somalia is the country identified by the 探花精选 as most at risk in 2023.
Photo: Kellie Ryan for the 探花精选

What are guardrails and why are they important?

This year the 探花精选 highlights the importance of local, national and international guardrails designed to protect vulnerable people around the world, particularly in Watchlist countries. These guardrails do not necessarily end crises, but they can dramatically lessen human suffering. 

鈥淕uardrails are actions, policies and mechanisms which prevent crises and minimize humanitarian needs,鈥 explains Safar Jalani. 

Guardrails can protect vulnerable people at all stages of crisis 鈥 a single guardrail shouldn鈥檛 be counted on to protect everyone. For example, access to social services like health care can act as a preventative guardrail that prevents a humanitarian crisis from breaking out in the first place. 

Even when crises have erupted, guardrails like cash assistance and food aid can minimize their impact. In some cases, the guardrail of diplomacy is needed to end conflict, while international law can act as a guardrail to hold perpetrators accountable.  

For many Watchlist countries, importing grain from Ukraine was a final guardrail against catastrophic food insecurity. 鈥淚n Somalia, continued conflict and a drought fueled by climate change limited the ability to produce food locally,鈥 says Safar Jalani. 鈥淪o when the war in Ukraine prevented the export of grain shipments, many Watchlist countries like Somalia, which imports 90 percent of its grain from Ukraine and Russia, slipped deeper into a humanitarian crisis.鈥

Several guardrails were successfully implemented in 2022. 

鈥淓xamples include the UN-brokered six-month truce in Yemen which led to an 86% drop in fatalities and the Black Sea Grain Initiative which allowed more than 12 million tons of food to be exported from Ukraine to lower-income countries suffering the worst effects of the global food crisis,鈥 explains Moran.

A woman sits and pours water from a truck into a large plastic container. Behind her is a desolate and dry landscape.
Fose* collects water from an 探花精选-supported water truck in a drought-stricken region of Ethiopia. For Fose and others members of her community, support enabling access to water is a lifesaving guardrail.

How is armed conflict driving crises?

Watchlist countries have experienced armed conflict for eight of the last 10 years, on average. They also accounted for 89 percent of all civilian fatalities in 2021, and 81 percent of people who have been forced to flee their homes. 

鈥淢ore than 100 million people are now displaced around the world,鈥 says Safar Jalani. 鈥淎ccording to the UNHCR, this is the highest number of displaced people ever recorded.鈥

Conflicts often destroy the infrastructure and services that can save lives when crises strike. 

鈥淣ot only does conflict have immediate consequences for civilians, it also affects countries in the long term,鈥 explains Safar Jalani. 鈥淐onflict destroys guardrails and makes it difficult for humanitarians to provide aid to those in need. The threat of potential conflict alone can prevent countries from receiving aid or investments.鈥

Data shows that wars are lasting longer on average and are spreading to new regions quicker than before. A key driver of this trend is the growing number of 鈥渋nternationalized internal conflicts,鈥 where at least one outside country contributes troops to internal fighting in another. 

Safar Jalani explains. 鈥淕lobal powers are taking advantage of local conflicts and tensions. They fuel war in other countries to achieve their own political objectives at home, making conflicts longer and more deadly. 

The spread of conflicts also increases political tensions between countries, making it difficult to negotiate peace settlements or solutions to global challenges like climate change. With diplomatic guardrails weakened, the international community loses valuable tools to keep civilians safe.

Who is most impacted by climate change?

Despite contributing just 1.9 percent of global 颁翱鈧 emissions in 2019, Watchlist countries are vulnerable to some of the world鈥檚 most intense climate disasters. This year, flooding affected 33 million people in Pakistan while severe drought continues to contribute to catastrophic food insecurity in East Africa. 

For Watchlist countries, climate shocks pose a threat to the guardrails meant to provide emergency support to people in crises. They also reduce their ability to prepare for future climate-fueled disasters.

鈥淥verall, the world is becoming more prepared to deal with climate shocks, but this isn鈥檛 true in Watchlist countries,鈥 says Safar Jalani. 鈥淐ountries on the Watchlist don鈥檛 have enough resources to deal with the immediate concerns of their citizens and invest in preparing for future climate shocks.鈥

Wealthy nations have pledged to help countries on the Watchlist prepare for future climate shocks through funds marked as 鈥渃limate financing.鈥 However, promises to distribute these funds have fallen short by tens of billions of dollars, leaving many Watchlist countries underprepared.

This is especially true for countries experiencing conflict, which in 2020 received just a third of the per capita climate change financing of countries without active conflict. This trend leaves nations like Ethiopia, which is experiencing prolonged conflict and climate-induced drought, without the support needed to strengthen guardrails and protect its citizens.

Faisal, a young boy, sits outside in the ruins of his family home. In the background, a field is submerged by floodwater.
In Pakistan, Faisal* sits in the remnants of his home which was destroyed by climate-induced flooding. These floods affected 33 million Pakistanis and submerged one-third of the country.
Photo: Saima Javaid for the 探花精选

What does economic turmoil mean for Watchlist countries?

The escalation of the war in Ukraine and the long-term impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic sent economic shocks around the world, increasing global food prices. The effects have been felt most severely in Watchlist countries, where markets have collapsed and food shortages have made it difficult for many to find enough to eat.

鈥淚n 2022, Watchlist countries saw an average of 39.7 percent inflation in food prices, double the average rate in non-Watchlist countries [19 percent],鈥 says Safar Jalani. 鈥淥ne hundred percent of people suffering from catastrophic food insecurity, the most severe category possible, live in Watchlist countries.鈥

When wealthy countries face rising inflation, they raise interest rates to attempt to slow it. But, hikes in interest rates in more developed countries depreciate the weaker currencies and push inflation higher in several Watchlist countries.

The economic crisis is particularly extreme in Afghanistan, which has faced economic collapse and growing poverty since the change in power in August of 2021. 

鈥淲e had nothing at home, neither firewood nor food. Everything was very expensive,鈥 says Aalia*, an Afghan mother who received cash assistance from the 探花精选. 鈥淟ast year a liter of oil cost 1,500 Afghanis, now it costs 3,000."

Aalia stands in her living room with two children in front of her.
Aalia has found it increasingly difficult to provide for her family's basic needs amid economic turmoil in Afghanistan. In 2022, she received cash assistance from the 探花精选 and was able to buy food, firewood and new clothes for her children.
Photo: Kiana Hayeri for the 探花精选

How do we solve these crises?

The 探花精选鈥檚 Watchlist not only identifies and explains why humanitarian needs are growing, it also offers solutions. In order to address the underlying causes of crises, we must rebuild critical guardrails in Watchlist countries.

Moran is optimistic that the Watchlist will inspire leaders to work together to limit the severity of humanitarian crises in 2023. 鈥淚 hope donors don鈥檛 retreat from their foreign-aid commitments, that the massive outpouring of support for Ukraine is also shown to other countries on the Watchlist. And I hope that over the next three to six months, governments prioritize Watchlist countries and work to prevent worst-case scenarios before it鈥檚 too late.

Break the cycle of crisis.

The international community treats crises as short-term problems and has failed to address the underlying causes driving humanitarian needs. This leads to more spending on emergency responses and a perception that humanitarians are the final guardrail against state failure. So how do we confront these issues?

鈥淭he first step is breaking the cycle of crisis,鈥 explains Moran. 鈥淲e need to recognize that humanitarian crises require more than just aid. Humanitarian crises are political crises, they鈥檙e economic crises, they鈥檙e developmental crises and they鈥檙e security crises.鈥

We need to address the underlying causes of crises, not just the symptoms.

One of the most pressing issues in Watchlist countries is extreme hunger. 鈥淪ix countries on the Watchlist are at risk of famine,鈥 says Moran. 鈥淲e could soon be seeing the first famine declaration in five years. Famine prevention must be a top priority in 2023.鈥

To address this issue, the international community must change its approach. Organizations like the U.N. Task Force on Preventing Famine should target countries most at risk and mobilize support before famine conditions are reached. 

鈥淚f mobilization starts once a famine has been declared, it鈥檚 already too late. By that point, a huge number of lives have already been lost,鈥 explains Moran.

A chart displaying the upwards trend in number of people facing IPC 5 conditions over time.

This lesson can be applied to other humanitarian crises. Donors should increase aid to fragile and conflict-affected countries to prevent them from deteriorating into failed states. Failed states are characterized by a collapse of guardrails and the government, which makes it extremely difficult for people to access basic services or meet their essential needs. 

Aid to these countries could ensure that there is funding for basic service delivery, including water and health services as well as education, which currently only receives 3 percent of all aid funding.

Uphold the laws of war.

The international community has established rules of war to safeguard civilians in times of conflict. However, failure to enforce these rules has eroded protections and left civilians increasingly vulnerable.

Actors committing crimes against international humanitarian law must be held accountable for their actions. The Watchlist calls for the U.N. Security Council to limit the use of veto power by the five permanent members (U.S., Russia, U.K., China and France) in cases of mass atrocities. By agreeing to not use their veto power in these circumstances, the Security Council would be able to hold perpetrators accountable and take a first step toward easing gridlock.

The international community must also address actors and conditions that do not allow humanitarian workers to access regions where people need lifesaving aid.

鈥淲e are seeing a growing trend where parties to conflicts are operating with impunity,鈥 says 探花精选 President and CEO David Miliband.

They are pummeling civilian infrastructure, weaponizing lifesaving aid, blocking 探花精选 staff and other humanitarians from reaching populations in need. Nearly 40 countries, including every single Watchlist country, are experiencing high to extreme constraints on humanitarian access.

Organizations delivering aid are often unable to speak out for fear of retaliation but it is time to take a stand. The 探花精选 calls for the establishment of an independent organization that can act as a watchdog and report on challenges that prevent the distribution of humanitarian aid. 

Throughout the entire peacebuilding process, from preventing violence to recovering from conflict, women must be empowered and involved. This includes greater funding to women-led organizations tackling issues at the heart of rising violence, as well as women鈥檚 inclusion at the negotiating table to make solutions accountable to the wider community. Critically, their participation makes solutions more durable; when women are included in forming peace accords, there is a 35 percent higher chance the resulting agreement will last for at least 15 years.

Somali refugee Zainab holds megaphone to raise awareness of women's rights
Zainab Bare fled violence in Somalia with her family and now lives in Helowyn refugee camp, where she helps raise awareness about women鈥檚 rights and 探花精选 services available to survivors of abuse.
Photo: Martha Tadesse for the 探花精选

Confront global problems together.

Global issues such as climate change, mass displacement, pandemics and economic turmoil require global solutions. Unfortunately, many countries are turning inwards at a time when international cooperation is key.

鈥淔ragile and conflict-affected states least responsible for climate change are being hit hardest right now,鈥 explains Moran. 鈥淲e all benefit from making progress on global issues like climate change. The entire international community should dedicate more resources to tackling collective issues.鈥 The Watchlist calls for wealthy countries to meet their promise of delivering $100 billion in climate financing to lesser developed countries. 

This financing should not ignore countries experiencing conflict. Deep analysis of the unique climate risks countries face should inspire tailored responses and ensure that no country is left behind. 

In addition, global support must embrace the over 100 million people displaced worldwide. 鈥淲hat happened in Ukraine, while not perfect, is a model of the welcoming response and support we should be demanding for people experiencing the same hardships in other parts of the world,鈥 says Moran. 

鈥淧eople are being displaced in Somalia, Yemen, Afghanistan, the Democratic Republic of Congo, but these crises are getting a fraction of the support.鈥 The Watchlist calls on donors and international financial institutions to scale up their support for displaced people around the world.

A group of Ukrainian refugees walk towards the camera near the Polish border.
Ukrainian families fleeing war arrive at the Medyka border crossing in Poland.
Photo: Francesco Pistilli for 探花精选

The Watchlist also urges action to be taken to 鈥減andemic-proof鈥 the world, to prevent or mitigate the health, economic, social, security and political repercussions that a disease like COVID-19 can unleash on the world.

To prepare for future pandemics, the international community must monitor, mobilize and confront new outbreaks quickly. The Watchlist supports calls for the establishment of a Global Health Threats Council and encourages the International Monetary Fund to regularly assess member countries鈥 pandemic preparedness and response plans.

Learn More

Find out more about the countries featured on this year鈥檚 Watchlist. You can also read the full 2023 Emergency Watchlist here.

In the face of conflict, climate change and economic turmoil, the 探花精选 stands committed to rebuilding guardrails in Watchlist countries. We deliver lifesaving aid in more than 40 countries around the world, providing clean water, emergency medical care, education, protection services and much more.

*Last names excluded for privacy

Consider donating to the 探花精选 to support our work in Watchlist countries and around the world.