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Carrying The Weight: Organizational Responsibility For The Mental Well-Being Of Humanitarian Workers

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Overview

This paper, published in the International Review of the Red Cross, argues that psychological distress among humanitarian workers is not primarily a consequence of trauma exposure but is significantly shaped by organizational and structural factors — including workload, inequitable reward systems, role ambiguity, managerial practices, hierarchical constraints, and workplace culture. Drawing on organizational psychology frameworks (effort–reward imbalance, job demand–control, conservation of resources, and perceived organizational support), Ellingham makes a case for shifting responsibility away from the individual and toward the institution. The paper covers humanitarian identity and its dual role as both motivator and source of vulnerability; the concept of moral injury; burn-out prevalence and its structural predictors; workplace bullying and harassment; and organizational frameworks for understanding psychosocial risk. It concludes with seven priority areas for organizational action, from redesigning reward systems to embedding accountability mechanisms.