ANTHROPOLOGY OF HUMANITARIAN INTERVENTIONS

M-DEA/01 - 6 CFU - 2° Semester

Teaching Staff

MARA BENADUSI


Course Structure

This course is designed in an interactive seminar style. Classes will consist of seminar meetings, film screenings, individual and collective discussion papers on the assigned reading material, guests' lectures, and a final written assignment. During seminar meetings, all students will be expected to actively engage with readings, lectures, and class discussion. Students’ general attendance, consistence, punctuality, participation and overall contribution significantly shape their overall assessment and final grade.

Attendance is mandatory. A maximum of three classes can be missed, provided that student emailed me in advance.



Detailed Course Content

In recent years, humanitarian interventions have gained a high attention in global politics and Euro-Mediterranean relations. Humanitarian personnel - lawyers, doctors, social workers, activists, etc. - striving for human rights, public health, and the security of civilians in endangered environments are more and more involved in a massive institutional apparatus, with an array of funding mechanisms and transnational intervention logics. Humanitarianism, however, has existed for centuries before formally arising in the first half of the 20th century, and has crossed into various ethical, political, and cultural frontiers and problematics.

This course contributes to the understanding of humanitarian governance, offering an introduction to anthropological theories that analyze the socio-cultural stakes of humanitarian aid. It will focus on the concept of “humanitarianism” to analyze the transformations of the intervention logics and “need-to-help” reasons in the field of international cooperation in response to humanitarian crises at global level, and in the Mediterranean area more specifically.

Students will be asked to read and discuss ethnographic case studies in different regional contexts (from disaster relief in Haiti and the Indian Ocean tsunami to post-war military interventions in the Balkans) which focus on diverse fields of humanitarian intervention: migrations and forced displacement, environmental crises and natural disasters, human-rights violation, and the care and housing of internally displaced persons (IDPs). Particular attention will be given to the ways in which different notions of vulnerability, emergency, aid, relief, recovery, justice are mobilized in these fields, both in practices and discourses, in order to consider the fundamental anthropological and power-related implications of humanitarian work.

 

The course will give the ability to:



Textbook Information

Feldman, Ilana, and Miriam Iris Ticktin, eds. 2010. In the Name of Humanity: The Government of Threat and Care. Durham [NC]: Duke University Press.

[Other reading materials (short papers and book chapters) will be available on Studium]




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