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Work Precarity, Mental Health, and Performance among Humanitarian Aid Workers in Egypt Post-2025 U.S. Funding Reduction

The humanitarian sector is increasingly characterized by precarious employment conditions and work precarity, including short-term contracts, unclear renewal terms, inadequate compensation, heavy workloads, and job insecurity, exacerbated by volatile donor funding. The 2025 U.S. funding cuts have in...

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Main Author: Allam, Mariam
Format: Thesis
Published: AUC Knowledge Fountain 2026
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access_status_str Open Access
author Allam, Mariam
author_browse Allam, Mariam
author_facet Allam, Mariam
author_sort Allam, Mariam
collection Thesis
description The humanitarian sector is increasingly characterized by precarious employment conditions and work precarity, including short-term contracts, unclear renewal terms, inadequate compensation, heavy workloads, and job insecurity, exacerbated by volatile donor funding. The 2025 U.S. funding cuts have intensified these vulnerabilities, particularly in countries like Egypt, with massive humanitarian operations because of being a significant destination for asylum applications and one of the largest refugee host countries. Despite the prevalence of precarious work in the humanitarian sector, limited research examines its effects on workers' mental health and work performance, especially during funding crises. This qualitative study explores the perceived effect of precarious employment and work precarity on 18 Egyptian humanitarian aid workers following the 2025 U.S. funding cuts. The research examines how employment conditions affect workers' psychological well-being and professional effectiveness and identifies moderating factors at the organizational and individual levels. Data were collected through semi-structured interviews with Egyptian humanitarian workers employed by international and non-governmental organizations affected by the cut. Findings revealed that participants' awareness of precarity evolved through employment experience, with stress intensifying during contract renewals and peaking following the 2025 U.S. funding cuts, which affected all workers directly or indirectly. Five dimensions of precarious employment—contract type, contract continuity, inadequate compensation, heavy workload, and intrinsic job features—shaped workers' experiences, alongside an unanticipated factor: discrimination across contract types and between local and international staff.  Based on the perceptions of the humanitarian aid workers interviewed, precarious conditions negatively impacted mental health, work performance, workplace environment, daily life, future planning, and personal relationships. Contrary to expectations, organizational responses to funding cuts—rather than the cuts themselves—emerged as the primary exacerbating factor. Identified moderating factors focused primarily on mitigating precarity's impacts rather than addressing root causes, with individual coping strategies centered on personal safety nets rather than organizational support. This study provides empirical evidence on the relationship between precarious employment and worker mental well-being in the humanitarian sector, extends precarious employment theory to this unique context, and offers practical recommendations for organizations and policymakers to address workforce precarity and improve employment sustainability in humanitarian work.
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institution American University in Cairo (Egypt)
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:36:04.472Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from AUC Knowledge Fountain — bepress
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spelling oai:fount.aucegypt.edu:etds-3799 Work Precarity, Mental Health, and Performance among Humanitarian Aid Workers in Egypt Post-2025 U.S. Funding Reduction Allam, Mariam The humanitarian sector is increasingly characterized by precarious employment conditions and work precarity, including short-term contracts, unclear renewal terms, inadequate compensation, heavy workloads, and job insecurity, exacerbated by volatile donor funding. The 2025 U.S. funding cuts have intensified these vulnerabilities, particularly in countries like Egypt, with massive humanitarian operations because of being a significant destination for asylum applications and one of the largest refugee host countries. Despite the prevalence of precarious work in the humanitarian sector, limited research examines its effects on workers' mental health and work performance, especially during funding crises. This qualitative study explores the perceived effect of precarious employment and work precarity on 18 Egyptian humanitarian aid workers following the 2025 U.S. funding cuts. The research examines how employment conditions affect workers' psychological well-being and professional effectiveness and identifies moderating factors at the organizational and individual levels. Data were collected through semi-structured interviews with Egyptian humanitarian workers employed by international and non-governmental organizations affected by the cut. Findings revealed that participants' awareness of precarity evolved through employment experience, with stress intensifying during contract renewals and peaking following the 2025 U.S. funding cuts, which affected all workers directly or indirectly. Five dimensions of precarious employment—contract type, contract continuity, inadequate compensation, heavy workload, and intrinsic job features—shaped workers' experiences, alongside an unanticipated factor: discrimination across contract types and between local and international staff.  Based on the perceptions of the humanitarian aid workers interviewed, precarious conditions negatively impacted mental health, work performance, workplace environment, daily life, future planning, and personal relationships. Contrary to expectations, organizational responses to funding cuts—rather than the cuts themselves—emerged as the primary exacerbating factor. Identified moderating factors focused primarily on mitigating precarity's impacts rather than addressing root causes, with individual coping strategies centered on personal safety nets rather than organizational support. This study provides empirical evidence on the relationship between precarious employment and worker mental well-being in the humanitarian sector, extends precarious employment theory to this unique context, and offers practical recommendations for organizations and policymakers to address workforce precarity and improve employment sustainability in humanitarian work. 2026-06-15T07:00:00Z thesis application/pdf https://fount.aucegypt.edu/etds/2740 https://fount.aucegypt.edu/context/etds/article/3799/viewcontent/01_mariam_allam_thesis.pdf Theses and Dissertations AUC Knowledge Fountain Work Precarity Mental Health Humanitarian Aid Workers U.S. Funding Reduction Nonprofit Studies Organization Development Other Public Affairs, Public Policy and Public Administration Other Social and Behavioral Sciences Public Administration Public Affairs
spellingShingle Work Precarity
Mental Health
Humanitarian Aid Workers
U.S. Funding Reduction
Nonprofit Studies
Organization Development
Other Public Affairs, Public Policy and Public Administration
Other Social and Behavioral Sciences
Public Administration
Public Affairs
Allam, Mariam
Work Precarity, Mental Health, and Performance among Humanitarian Aid Workers in Egypt Post-2025 U.S. Funding Reduction
title Work Precarity, Mental Health, and Performance among Humanitarian Aid Workers in Egypt Post-2025 U.S. Funding Reduction
title_full Work Precarity, Mental Health, and Performance among Humanitarian Aid Workers in Egypt Post-2025 U.S. Funding Reduction
title_fullStr Work Precarity, Mental Health, and Performance among Humanitarian Aid Workers in Egypt Post-2025 U.S. Funding Reduction
title_full_unstemmed Work Precarity, Mental Health, and Performance among Humanitarian Aid Workers in Egypt Post-2025 U.S. Funding Reduction
title_short Work Precarity, Mental Health, and Performance among Humanitarian Aid Workers in Egypt Post-2025 U.S. Funding Reduction
title_sort work precarity mental health and performance among humanitarian aid workers in egypt post 2025 u s funding reduction
topic Work Precarity
Mental Health
Humanitarian Aid Workers
U.S. Funding Reduction
Nonprofit Studies
Organization Development
Other Public Affairs, Public Policy and Public Administration
Other Social and Behavioral Sciences
Public Administration
Public Affairs
url https://fount.aucegypt.edu/etds/2740
https://fount.aucegypt.edu/context/etds/article/3799/viewcontent/01_mariam_allam_thesis.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT allammariam workprecaritymentalhealthandperformanceamonghumanitarianaidworkersinegyptpost2025usfundingreduction