“…A paper by Lucchi (2010) argued that international agencies need to respond to the humanitarian needs of vulnerable communities regardless of whether the violence affecting them stems from an international war, an internal conflict, or another situation of violence. This contributed to shifting the debate on engagement with non‐state armed groups (NSAGs) beyond politically motivated insurgents (Dudouet, 2010; Whitfield, 2010) and violent extremist groups (Modirzadeh, Lewis, and Bruderlein, 2011; Briscoe, 2013) towards criminal armed groups (CAGs) with more parochial objectives, such as gangs in Guatemala City (Guatemala), Port‐au‐Prince (Haiti), and Rio de Janeiro (Brazil). Two years later, Lucchi (2012) changed the focus from ‘why’ humanitarian agencies should intervene in the settings of urban violence regardless of the labels attached to contexts and perpetrators, to ‘how’ they can intervene effectively from an operational point of view to address attendant needs.…”