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Handbook on Humanitarianism and Inequality - Chapter 31 - Africa's long fight for humanitarian self-sufficiency

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Welcome back to a new year! Every two weeks I am going to feature one of the chapters of our Handbook on Humanitarianism and Inequality which was published in spring 2024. This week we are taking a closer look at Chapter 31 - Africa’s long fight for humanitarian self-sufficiency - contributed by Oheneba A. Boateng. From the introduction  African civil society and governments have always organised to address their own humanitarian problems. Yet, before the localisation agenda emerged (see Chapter 6 by Youakim and Stephan on Localisation in this volume), even inclusive mainstream research like Barnett (2011) and Everill and Kaplan (2013) prioritised external actors and largely ignored homegrown African capacity, unwittingly implying that the continent does little to help itself. This trope persisted despite research on how homegrown African capacity had been eroded by international organisations ( Juma and Suhrke, 2002 ). This history, however, is essential for understanding th...

Handbook on Humanitarianism and Inequality - Chapter 30 - West Asia and North Africa

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Welcome back to a new year! Every two weeks I am going to feature one of the chapters of our Handbook on Humanitarianism and Inequality which was published in spring 2024. This week we are taking a closer look at Chapter 30 - West Asia and North Africa - contributed by Josepha Wessels. From the introduction  West Asia tends to be called ‘Middle East’, a term embedded in Eurocentric geopolitics and colonialism, whereby the region is referred to in relationship to their proximity to Europe. The region has large quantities of the most vied natural resources on this planet: oil and gas. The role and power of energy supply systems cannot be ruled out in defining international diplomacy ( Jones, 2012 ; Mammadov, 2018 ). Countries and nation-states of Europe, the US, China, and Russia, have a vested strategic military and geopolitical interest in this region (Jones, 2012; Mammadov, 2018). Diplomatic ties with fossil fuel producing countries in the region, that are far from liberal demo...

Handbook on Humanitarianism and Inequality - Chapter 29 - International humanitarianism in East Asia

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Every two weeks I am going to feature one of the chapters of our Handbook on Humanitarianism and Inequality which was published in spring 2024. This week we are taking a closer look at Chapter 29 - International humanitarianism in East Asia - contributed by Alistair D.B. Cook, Lina Gong and Oscar A. Gómez. From the introduction  The aim of this chapter is to explore how humanitarianism is manifested in Asia to contribute an alternative approach and challenge the dominant understanding of humanitarianism. In describing this alternative approach, we highlight two principal observations.  First, regional institutions in East Asia play a buffer role in contesting international interventionism while benefiting and, indeed, depending on traditional international humanitarian resources for its functioning. This dependence however constrains how and to what extent East Asian countries can change the inequality in power in the global humanitarian system.  Second, the rise of st...

Handbook on Humanitarianism and Inequality - Chapter 28 - Australia, New Zealand, and Pacific Regions

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Every two weeks I am going to feature one of the chapters of our Handbook on Humanitarianism and Inequality which was published in spring 2024. This week we are taking a closer look at Chapter 28 – Australia, New Zealand, and Pacific Regions - contributed by Agnieszka Sobocinska. From the introduction  This chapter argues that humanitarianism in Australia, New Zealand, and the Pacific has been profoundly imprinted by its roots in settler colonialism. Humanitarianism in Australia and New Zealand grew out of the project of appropriating Indigenous land, and somewhat ironically, facilitated the extension of government control over Indigenous lives. The relationship between humanitarianism, colonialism, and governmentality is by no means unique to Australia or the Pacific; as Didier Fassin notes, the ‘tension between inequality and solidarity, between a relation of domination and a relation of assistance, is constitutive of all humanitarian governance’ ( Fassin, 2012: 3 ). The relat...