The far side: the meta functions of humanitarianism in a globalised world.

Antonio Donini
Author Information
  1. Antonio Donini: Feinstein International Center, Tufts University, USA. antonio.donini@tufts.edu

Abstract

This paper explores the meta functions of humanitarianism--that is, the functions that, as an ideology, a movement and a profession, it performs, wittingly or unwittingly, in the early twenty-first century. The term humanitarianism is used as shorthand to encompass a complex set of currents of thought, actions and institutions of which the boundaries are unclear. The focus is on mainstream humanitarianism, the dominant Northern/Western enterprise. The paper first discusses the relationship between humanitarianism and globalised power. It goes on to examine three types of functions that humanitarianism and humanitarian action perform: 'macro' functions--the deep undercurrents, power relations and values that humanitarianism articulates and transmits; 'meso' functions--those that relate to the political economy of humanitarian action and to the mechanics (rather than to the ideology) of globalisation; and 'micro' functions that relate to the motivations of the individuals who devote their energies to humanitarianism.

MeSH Term

Altruism
Capitalism
Colonialism
Disaster Planning
Humans
Internationality
Interpersonal Relations
Motivation
Organizations
Philosophy
Politics
Relief Work
Rescue Work

Word Cloud

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