Nigel Fisher (United Nations)

in political science from McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, where he met his wife Jennifer.

After working with Canada’s International Development Research Centre in Ottawa, Fisher began his United Nations career with Unicef in Laos in 1977, before moving on to India, Mozambique and then as the agency’s Representative in the People’s Democratic Republic of Yemen.

In 1988, he was appointed Deputy Executive Secretary of the World Conference on Education for All (Jomtien, Thailand, 1990), following which he became Unicef’s Deputy Regional Director for the Middle East and North Africa and Area Representative for Jordan, Syria, the Occupied Territories and Djibouti.

He then became director of the organisation’s Office for Emergency Operations and was influential in the development of Unicef’s Anti-war Agenda.

[2] Following a sabbatical year working on the issue of children affected by armed conflict, as Visiting UN Fellow at the Canadian Centre for Foreign Policy Development, in Canada’s then-Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade, he became Unicef’s Regional Director for South Asia.

Immediately after the attack on New York’s World Trade Center on 11 September 2001, Fisher was appointed Unicef’s Special Representative for Afghanistan and border areas.

[3] His next appointment was as Director of the United Nations Office for Project Services (UNOPS), again at the rank of Assistant Secretary-General.

[6] In April 2010, he was recalled by the United Nations to assume the role of acting Deputy Special Representative of the Secretary-General in the United Nations Stabilisation Mission in Haiti (MINUSTAH), Resident UN Coordinator and Humanitarian Coordinator.

[9] His final UN appointment was as the Regional UN Humanitarian Coordinator for the Syria Crisis, based in Amman, Jordan.

[10] Since leaving the UN, Fisher has acted as a consultant to the United Nations, including to the World Humanitarian Summit (2014), to Governments in Asia and the South Pacific on disaster preparedness and post-disaster recovery, as well as to several foundations.

He has been a board director and advisor for a number of international philanthropic organizations and business enterprises.

Fisher has also had cameo acting roles in two films directed by Sean Penn: as Ivan in The Last Face (2016) and as Dr. Halstead in Flag Day (2021) [11] Fisher is currently an Adjunct Professor in the Faculty of Applied Science at the University of British Columbia, Canada.

Lederskap og straffefrihet – politikken bak traumatisering av barn under vaepnede konflikter.

A Framework for Survival: Health, Human Rights and Humanitarian Assistance in Conflicts and Disasters (rev).