Love and Liberation Love and Liberation

Love and Liberation

Humanitarian Work in Ethiopia's Somali Region

    • $23.99
    • $23.99

Publisher Description

Lauren Carruth's Love and Liberation tells a new kind of humanitarian story. The protagonists are not volunteers from afar but rather Somali locals caring for each other: nurses, aid workers, policymakers, drivers, community health workers, and bureaucrats. The contributions of locals are often taken for granted, and the competencies, aspirations, and effectiveness of local staffers frequently remain muted or absent from the planning and evaluation of humanitarian interventions structured by outsiders. Relief work is traditionally imagined as politically neutral and impartial, and interventions are planned as temporary, extraordinary, and distant.

Carruth provides an alternative vision of what "humanitarian" response means in practice—not driven by International Humanitarian Law, the missions of Western relief organizations, or trends in the aid industry or academia but instead by what Somalis call samafal. Samafal is structured by the cultivation of lasting relationships of care, interdependence, kinship, and ethnic solidarity. Samafal is also explicitly political and potentially emancipatory: humanitarian responses present opportunities for Somalis to begin to redress histories of colonial partitions and to make the most out of their political and economic marginalization. By centering Love and Liberation around Somalis' understanding and enactments of samafal, Carruth offers a new perspective on politics and intervention in Africa.

GENRE
Nonfiction
RELEASED
2021
October 15
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
240
Pages
PUBLISHER
Cornell University Press
SELLER
Ingram DV LLC
SIZE
3
MB
Politicising Polio Politicising Polio
2019
Out of War Out of War
2018
African Culture and Global Politics African Culture and Global Politics
2014
Germans on the Kenyan Coast Germans on the Kenyan Coast
2017
Horizons of Security Horizons of Security
2021
The Human Cost of African Migrations The Human Cost of African Migrations
2007