The Institute of International Humanitarian Affairs offers non-credit professional courses for practitioners around the world. Each professional course for Spring 2025 is designed to prepare current and future aid workers with the knowledge and skills needed to respond effectively to humanitarian crises and disasters.
Semester-long courses include:
All Spring 2025 semester-long courses listed can be taken for 3 academic credits or for a Certificate of Completion from Fordham University at a reduced cost.
Cost with Academic Credit: View GSAS Tuition and Fees
Cost for Certificate: $990
Thursdays 5:30pm-7:30pm
Synchronous Online
This course will introduce students to the pressing issues and acute challenges of contemporary humanitarian response through three modules on (1) Threats and Vulnerabilities, (2) Accountability in Humanitarian Response, and (3) Innovations in Humanitarian Response. The aim of the course is to examine how the international community forms consensus regarding best practices, and how this, in turn, informs humanitarian practice.
Attributes: PMMA, PSIC, PSJH.
Upon fulfilling the course requirements described in the syllabus, students will receive a Certificate of Completion from Fordham University.
This course will…
Example Units:
Humanitarian Aid: Accountable to Whom, and What for? | What Does It Mean to be Food Insecure? | Humanitarian Futures: What Are Our Strengths? | Humanitarian Origins: Neo-Colonialist and Racist? |
Tuesdays, 5:30pm – 7:15 pm I Lincoln Center
This course will examine the impact of climate change on societies, cultures, and economies in the West African Sahel, which includes Burkina Faso, Chad, Mali, Mauritania, Niger, and Nigeria. The Sahel, a transitional zone between the Sahara Desert and the savanna in sub-Saharan Africa, has been particularly affected by climate change, which has led to unpredictable rainfall and drought. This is also an area of significant out-migration to other parts of Africa and Europe. Considering the movement of Sahelian populations in search of areas with heavier rainfall or irrigation, this course aims to examine the interdependence existing between climate change, conflict, and migration in order to confront the challenges facing rural and urban development in the Sahel. The course goes beyond approaches focused on the physical and chemical aspects of water to develop a constructive perspective, valuing local and international responses to climate change and water management.
Attributes: HULI, PSEV, PSJH, URSG.
Upon fulfilling the course requirements described in the syllabus, students will receive a Certificate of Completion from Fordham University.
Online/Asynchronous
Forced migration is a central issue in the provision of humanitarian and assistance. This course will examine the causes of forced migration, including violent conflict, natural disasters, development projects, human trafficking and others, and will use a variety of case studies to examine international responses to forced migration, the migrant experience, legal and human rights around migration, and the role of human agencies and NGOs in responding to forced migration. Four-credit courses that meet for 150 minutes per week require three additional hours of class preparation per week on the part of the student in lieu of an additional hour of formal instruction.
Attributes: HPSE, INST, ISIN, LAHA, LALS, PJCR, PJST.
Upon fulfilling the course requirements described in the syllabus, students will receive a Certificate of Completion from Fordham University.
Mondays, 5:30 pm – 7:15 pm | Lincoln Center
This course will introduce students to the principles and theoretical frameworks behind data collection and analysis in the context of humanitarian response. It will cover qualitative and quantitative research methods used in humanitarian program monitoring and evaluation (M&E). The aim is to give students an overview of basic methodologies utilized in the field as well as the tools to determine appropriate M&e strategies in various humanitarian settings.
Attribute: PMMA.
This course…
Tuesdays, 5:30 pm – 7:15 pm | Lincoln Center
This course will provide students with a comprehensive introduction to international practices and norms concerning the protection of vulnerable populations in humanitarian emergencies. The past 20 years of international humanitarian interventions has given rise to standardization of humanitarian activities, with a particular emphasis on protection practices. Students will gain an understanding of the landscape of organizations and entities involved in designing these frameworks and assess their efficacy and continued relevance to protecting vulnerable groups.
Attributes: GSSC, HUHR, PMMA.
This course…
Example Units:
Revisiting international frameworks: sources, venues, methods, players | Setting the agenda: Human rights protections by whom and for whom? | Documentation: The power of the story and the storyteller | Inclusion and exclusion in international fora |
Example Units:
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Mondays, 5:30 pm – 7:15 pm | Rose Hill
This course will introduce students to the operational aspects of humanitarian response and focus primarily on the role of human resources (HR) and financial management. In response to the continuing professionalization of the humanitarian sector, this course will provide students with a common understanding of hiring practices, budget management, and donor relations in a humanitarian intervention.
This course will…
“I had the pleasure of taking your Contemporary Issues in Humanitarian Action course, which deeply influenced my perspective on global humanitarian efforts. Your course provided me with invaluable insights into the challenges faced by humanitarian actors, particularly in light of current global crises, and I often reflect on the topics that we learned throughout the course almost everyday with what I hear on the news and on social media.”
May 2025 Master’s candidate in Ethics and Society