Logo of the organization

INTRODUCING HUMANITY & INCLUSION COLLABORATION

Humanity & Inclusion works in over 60 countries, reducing the impact of conflict on civilians, adapting emergency response to the needs of populations, and centering the inclusion of people with disabilities and vulnerable populations in all that they do.

In addition to humanitarian demining work, HI's projects also include rehabilitation, psychological support to the survivors of violence, social and economic inclusion, and promoting the fundamental rights of people with disabilities.

In 2025, HI's projects directly supported over 2.9 million people. Including family members and caregivers, these projects reached more than 12 million people globally.

From demining in Syria, to prosthetics access in Sudan, clearance in Colombia and Laos, risk education in Ukraine, and economic inclusion in Senegal, to emergency response in Venezuela; HI's work focuses on the dignity of whole person and the pillars of support for entire communities.

IN PARTNERSHIP

More than half of the world's countries remain contaminated by landmines and cluster munitions. These weapons don't observe ceasefires. They lie dormant for decades, killing and maiming civilians long after conflict has ended, deepening poverty, displacing families, and turning ordinary land into a lethal obstacle.

Humanity & Inclusion has been fighting this reality since 1982, when the organization was founded in response to the landmine crisis among Cambodian refugees. Today, HI trains demining teams to clear explosive hazards from civilian paths, educates communities on how to identify and avoid unexploded ordnance, and provides comprehensive support to survivors: rehabilitation, prosthetic limbs, mental health care, and pathways back to work and community life. HI also helped found the International Campaign to Ban Landmines, earning a share of the Nobel Peace Prize after the 1997 Mine Ban Treaty was signed.

 

Every ARTICLE22 piece begins as a remnant of war and ends as an act of hope. Handcrafted by artisan families in Laos from Vietnam War shrapnel, each piece funds the clearance of the 80 million unexploded bombs still scattered across Laotian fields and farmland. Now, that mission is deepening through a partnership with Humanity & Inclusion — the world's most comprehensive mine action organization.

 

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