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The Syrian crisis is one of the most serious humanitarian disasters
in recent history. Yet the widely reported numbers-more than 6
million displaced, including 5 million refugees-reflect only a
fractional toll of the conflict. Numerous international
organizations, states, and civil society movements have called for
the laws of war to be respected, sieges lifted, and humanitarian
access facilitated. But beneath each of these humanitarian appeals
lies a complicated reality extending beyond the binary narratives
that have come to define the war in Syria. Everybody's War examines
the complexities of humanitarianism in Syria and the wide-ranging
consequences for both Syria's populations and humanitarian
responses to future conflicts. Organized by Medecins Sans
Frontieres, this edited volume brings together academics and
humanitarian practitioners from across the globe to provide a
multitude of perspectives on the politics of aid in the Syrian war.
Contributors explore the humanitarian crisis behind the Syrian
conflict through the history and fragmentation of Syrian health
care, the role of international humanitarian law in enabling
attacks on health facilities, and the lived experience of siege in
all its layers. Further attention is given to the ways in which
humanitarian actors have fed the war economy and joined the
information wars that have raged throughout the region over the
past ten years. While the Syrian crisis has been everybody's war,
it has certainly not been everybody's victory. This volume shares
the intricate story of aid delivery and humanitarian complicity
within one of the defining conflicts of the twenty-first century.
The 2014-2015 Ebola epidemic in West Africa was an unprecedented
medical and political emergency that cast an unflattering light on
multiple corners of government and international response. Fear,
not rational planning, appeared to drive many decisions made at
population and leadership levels, which in turn brought about a
response that was as uneven as it was unprecedented: entire
populations were decimated or destroyed, vaccine trials were
fast-tracked, health staff died, untested medications were used (or
not used) in controversial ways, humanitarian workers returned home
to enforced isolation, and military was employed to sometimes
disturbing ends. The epidemic revealed serious fault lines at all
levels of theory and practice of global public health: national
governments were shown to be helpless and unprepared for calamity
at this scale; the World Health Organization was roundly condemned
for its ineffectiveness; the US quietly created its own African CDC
a year after the epidemic began. Amid such chaos, Medecins sans
Frontieres was forced to act with unprecdented autonomy - and amid
great criticism - in responding to the disease, taking
unprecedented steps in deploying services and advocating for
international aid. The Politics of Fear provides a primary
documentary resource for recounting and learning from the Ebola
epidemic. Comprising eleven topic-based chapters and four
eyewitness vignettes from both MSF- and non-MSF-affiliated
contributors (all of whom have been given access to MSF Ebola
archives from Guinea, Sierra Leone, and Liberia for research), it
aims to provide a politically agnostic account of the defining
health event of the 21st century so far, one that will hopefully
inform current opinions and future responses.
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