While the success and failure of development cooperation and
humanitarian aid have found extensive coverage in the academic
literature and the public debate, studies that address the
experience of aid workers are still rare. This book explores the
life worlds of people working in aid and analyses the processes
that lead to the involvement in development cooperation, emergency
relief and human rights work and what impact aid work has on the
life-courses of aid workers, including their relationships with
friends, family and partners.
In order to capture the trajectories which lead to "Aidland" a
biographical perspective is employed. Rich reflexive data allows
the author to theorize about the often contradictory experiences of
those involved in development cooperation, emergency relief and
human rights work. A life-course perspective on the involvement in
"Aidland" reveals that boundary crossing between development
cooperation, emergency relief and human rights is not unusual and
that considering these fields as separate spheres might overlook
important connections. The book addresses power relations not just
between aid recipients and donors but also among aid personnel.
This book constitutes an important supplement to existing
studies that predominantly focus on the contradictions and dilemmas
of aid, but neglect the experiences of aid workers themselves. It
contributes to the emerging sociology and anthropology of aid
workers and is of great interest to professionals and researchers
in Humanitarian and development studies, sociology, anthropology,
political science and international relations, international social
work and social psychology.
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