Subject guides / Humanitarian Action
Humanitarian Action
Also appears in programme titles as: Humanitarian Studies · Humanitarianism and Conflict Response
What a humanitarian action degree actually is
When an earthquake, a war or a famine hits, a professionalised system moves: needs assessments, cluster coordination, protection mandates, logistics under fire. Humanitarian action is the field that studies and staffs that system — its law, its ethics, its operations and its uncomfortable politics. Degrees here train the coordinators and analysts of response, not the field medics.
The strongest programmes live inside practice institutions: Manchester's HCRI (a dedicated humanitarian institute), LSE's emergencies-flavoured development MSc, and — on the legal end — Essex's humanitarian law LLM and the Geneva Academy's conflict-law flagship. Oxford's refugee-focused MSc borders the field from the migration side. Where you enter depends on whether your lens is operations, law or displacement.
What you study — and the bar to entry
Operational programmes (HCRI, LSE) cover the humanitarian system and its reform debates, disaster theory, conflict analysis, and project design in emergencies — LSE's includes a live consultancy project for a humanitarian organisation, HCRI's an optional field research trip. The legal route (Essex, Geneva Academy) teaches the law of armed conflict and its human rights interfaces.
No quantitative bar; the real currency is field exposure. Admissions read humanitarian, emergency-response or conflict-zone experience the way finance programmes read internships — and so do the employers waiting on the other side.
Where it leads
Programme and coordination roles across the UN humanitarian system (OCHA, WFP, UNHCR), the Red Cross/Red Crescent movement, and the major INGOs (MSF's non-medical functions, IRC, NRC); protection and access roles for the legally trained; and the donor side — humanitarian desks at FCDO-style ministries and ECHO. The sector runs on rosters, surge deployments and short contracts: mobility is the job description, and the monitoring-and-evaluation skill set is the most reliably employable specialisation.
Who it suits — and who it does not
A good fit if you are…
- Field staff (national and international) formalising operational experience for coordination-level roles
- Lawyers and legal researchers heading for protection, access negotiation or conflict-law practice
- Scholarship applicants from crisis-affected countries — the localisation agenda makes exactly this profile a funding priority
Probably not the right degree if…
- Applicants with zero exposure to emergencies expecting the degree to substitute for it — volunteer or national-society experience first
- Those who want clinical or engineering response work: that is medical/WASH training, not this field
- Anyone needing career stability — the sector is structurally short-contract and deployment-based
Where to study it: the programme map
Five programmes across three lenses — operations (Manchester HCRI, LSE), law (Essex, Geneva Academy) and displacement (Oxford). All verified against official pages; the legal rows also appear in the Human Rights Law guide, which covers that route in depth.
| University | Official programme title | Length | Tuition (intl) | Experience |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Geneva Academy of International Humanitarian Law and Human RightsSwitzerland | LLM – Master of Advanced Studies in International Humanitarian Law and Human Rights | 12 mo | — | — |
| London School of Economics and Political ScienceUnited Kingdom | MSc International Development and Humanitarian Emergencies | 12 mo | — | — |
| University of EssexUnited Kingdom | LLM International Humanitarian Law | 12 mo | — | — |
| University of ManchesterUnited Kingdom | MA Humanitarianism and Conflict Response (HCRI) | 12 mo | — | — |
| University of ManchesterUnited Kingdom | MSc International Disaster Management | 12 mo | GBP 30,700 | — |
| University of OxfordUnited Kingdom | MSc in Refugee and Forced Migration Studies | 9 mo | — | — |
Every row verified against the official programme page; oldest verification 15 Jul 2026. Nothing here is a paid placement.
Application strategy and funding routes
Pick your lens first: operations (HCRI for the dedicated-institute immersion, LSE for the development-emergencies bridge and its consultancy project), law (Essex, Geneva Academy), or displacement (Oxford's refugee MSc — covered in the Migration Studies guide). HCRI is the quiet specialist pick: a whole institute in a Russell Group university that generalist league tables never surface.
All the UK one-year programmes fit Chevening's rule, and applicants from crisis-affected and disaster-prone countries sit squarely inside Chevening and Commonwealth priorities. The humanitarian sector's own funding matters too: some employers (UN agencies, large INGOs) sponsor staff through part-time and distance study — worth asking before you resign to study.
Which scholarship funds which programme
Computed from each scheme's published rules (destination, level, course length) — not a guarantee; list-based schemes still require checking the official list.
- Geneva Academy of International Humanitarian Law and Human Rights — study destination outside the scheme
- London School of Economics and Political Science
- University of Essex
- University of Manchester
- University of Manchester
- University of Oxford
- Geneva Academy of International Humanitarian Law and Human Rights — study destination outside the scheme
- London School of Economics and Political Science
- University of Essex
- University of Manchester
- University of Manchester
- University of Oxford
Frequently asked questions
Do I need field experience to get in — and to get hired?
To get in: strong programmes admit some candidates without it, but they compete against applicants with response experience. To get hired: effectively yes — the degree amplifies field experience rather than replacing it. National-society volunteering and local NGO response work both count.
Humanitarian action vs international development — what is the difference?
Time horizon and mandate: humanitarian action is needs-based emergency response under humanitarian principles; development is long-term structural change. The "nexus" between them is the field's central debate — LSE's programme deliberately straddles it if you want both.
Does Chevening fund humanitarian degrees?
Yes — the Manchester, LSE and Essex programmes in our map are one-year UK degrees inside Chevening's rule, and crisis-affected-country applicants match its priorities well. The Geneva Academy sits outside Chevening (Switzerland) but runs its own scholarship pool.
Is the pay as bad as people say?
International-staff packages at UN agencies and large INGOs are more comfortable than the sector's reputation suggests (allowances included), but careers are contract-to-contract and family logistics are hard. National-staff pay varies widely. Nobody enters this field for the compensation curve.
Related fields
Sources
Official programme pages (linked per row above) · official scholarship rules and participating-programme lists · university admission regulations. Every data row records its source URL and verification date; stale rows are re-checked or removed.
Global Study Prep is independent and not affiliated with any university or scholarship programme. Programme details change — always confirm on the official page before applying.