Home>New Realities of Politics and Humanitarianism: Between Solidarity and Abandonment
03.11.2021
New Realities of Politics and Humanitarianism: Between Solidarity and Abandonment
About this event
From 03 November 2021 09:00 to 05 November 2021 19:00
Follow the Opening Session Live!
The 6th International Humanitarian Studies Conference will be organized in Paris, from 3-5 November 2021, by Sciences Po and the International Humanitarian Studies Association, with a significant scientific implication of the Center for International Studies (CERI) at Sciences Po. Additional partners will contribute to the streams and panels of the conference.
The COVID-19 pandemic has had a major impact on humanitarian needs and responses in the last year and put solidarity to the test. The competition over vaccines where poor and conflict-affected areas are at the bottom of the list to be served shows us the naked reality of humanitarian politics and it is feared this situation will compound humanitarian crises even more. While the volume and range of humanitarian activities is higher than ever, the traditionally dominant actors in international aid, i.e., the US, the UK, and the EU, are turning away from the notions of solidarity and respect for the rights of refugees or disaster-affected citizens enshrined in international law towards securitization and criminalization of migration. Together with ever more complex political arrangements, often imbued with populist authoritarianism, whether in Venezuela, India or South Sudan, what humanitarians can do on the ground is being restricted. Are we witnessing the increasing abandonment of crisis-affected people and the humanitarian project? How can solidarity and principled approaches be brought back to the center of the humanitarian endeavor?
The drive for localisation, increasing use of cash transfers, rapid changes in the use of technologies, increasing attention for disaster risk reduction and changing approaches to accountability and participation continue to have major impact on the way humanitarianism is organized, implemented and how it impacts crisis-affected people and communities. As humanitarianism increasingly seeks to build on local capacities and people’s resilience, questions can be raised as to what this means for the protection of vulnerable people.
The ambition of this iteration of the conference is to provide a critical forum for discussing the changes within humanitarianism and what these changing political realities mean for the protection and assistance to crisis-affected populations.
Register for the Opening Session with Dorothea Hilhorst, Alain Dieckhoff, Michel Agier, Anne Gueguen and Julienne N. Anoko (November 3 at 13.30).
The 6th International Humanitarian Studies Conference will be as inclusive as possible.
Panel themes:
- Theme 1 – Health and the Environment
- Theme 2 – Localising Humanitarian Studies
- Theme 3 – Political Economy and Politics of Humanitarianism
- Theme 4 – Technology and Innovation
- Theme 5 – Migration, Displacement and Refugees.
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Credit photo: Ingall, Niger – September 2013: woman in traditional clothing carry food in tent camp in Sahel zone © Katja Tsvetkova