Enhance human security by clearing landmines and unexploded ordnance, reduce the threat from small arms & light weapons and by providing risk education and raising awareness
Support local structures and institutions in finding sustainable solutions to residual problems in a manner that enables economic and social development.
DDG works to enable post-conflict communities to gain access to their assets and support the efforts of governments and relief- and development organisations to enable recovery and community transition towards social and economic development. DDG currently operates Mine Action programmes in Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya, Myanmar, Somalia, South Sudan, Sri Lanka and Vietnam, and Armed Violence Reduction programmes in Côte d'Ivoire, Kenya, Libya, Somalia, South Sudan, Uganda and Yemen. In Liberia DDG has been involved in the development of legislation on small arms and light weapons in cooperation with local authorities. DDG is a founding member of the Global Alliance on Armed Violence.
DDG's Mine Action operations are based on the Ottawa Convention’s Five Pillars of Mine Action, namely:
Clearance of mines and unexploded ordnance
Mine Risk Education
Victim assistance
Advocacy
Stockpile destruction
All work is executed to highest technical standards, security considerations and in due respect for community prioritisation. DDG operations are accredited according to International Mine Action Standards and, where available, to National Technical Standards. DDG employs a wide range of approaches to release safe land, including manual and mechanical demining. An example of DDG approaches is the Village-by-Village Clearance that integrates community liaison, education and clearance and is successfully implemented in several countries where the organisation works. As part of DDG’s mission to ensure that mine action efficiency results in impact effectiveness DDG has developed an for mine action which is available for all interested.
DDG’s AVR operations are based on the Armed Violence Lens developed by OECD. The lens captures the main elements of armed violence at different levels of intervention:
The people that are affected by armed violence – both the direct victims and the broader society that also suffers the consequences
The perpetrators of armed violence
The instruments of armed violence
The wider institutional/cultural environment that enables, or protects against, armed violence