“…In this marketplace of post‐conflict assistance, ‘clients’ in search of services, help, or healing ‘shop around', looking for different possibilities at different points in time, and comparing what different actors have to offer in response to their respective place‐ and time‐contingent needs, means, resources, and priorities. Individuals and communities choose between different services and institutions, often ‘moving from one healing option to another’ (Gammelin, 2018, p. 245), ‘according to the constraints they face and the outcome they hope to achieve in different arenas’ (Anying and Gausset, 2017, p. 354). The different sets of actors—NGOs, religions institutions, state agencies, and traditional authorities—thus serve as ‘entrepreneurs’ (Madlingozi, 2010), supplying services, and the affected communities are the metaphorical ‘clients', who ‘shop around’ for services in response to their needs and experiences, in search of healing and assistance to address their harms.…”