Humanitarianism at home

Daniel McAvoy, Annalise Ingram, Luke S. Bearup
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Australia has faced various unprecedented challenges in recent years: the extended bushfire season of 2019–20, wide-spread and increasingly severe storms and flooding, and the grave health and socio-economic impacts of the global COVID-19 pandemic. Such events have prompted greater awareness of our shared vulnerability to disasters. They have also exacerbated food insecurity, homelessness, poverty, family violence, and increased the vulnerability of refugees and people seeking asylum in Australia. Where disasters and similar issues are identified in low-income countries, they are typically framed in terms of humanitarian need and may even be the subject of international humanitarian action. Why is it then, that the language and practices of humanitarianism are not ordinarily applied in Australian settings? What indeed is humanitarianism when it is not international? What, if anything, do international experiences of humanitarianism have to offer in Australian contexts? This paper describes a research program that has been prompted by these questions and shares some preliminary findings concerning the perspectives of Australian practitioners on the relevance of humanitarian values, knowledge, and practices in Australia.
国内的人道主义
近年来,澳大利亚面临着各种前所未有的挑战:2019-20年的森林大火季节延长,广泛且日益严重的风暴和洪水,以及全球COVID-19大流行对健康和社会经济的严重影响。这些事件促使人们更加认识到我们共同易受灾害影响。它们还加剧了粮食不安全、无家可归、贫困、家庭暴力,并增加了难民和在澳大利亚寻求庇护的人的脆弱性。在低收入国家查明灾害和类似问题时,这些问题通常是根据人道主义需要拟订的,甚至可能是国际人道主义行动的主题。那么,为什么人道主义的语言和做法通常不适用于澳大利亚的环境呢?如果人道主义不是国际性的,那它到底是什么?如果有的话,国际人道主义经验对澳大利亚有什么启示?本文描述了一个由这些问题引发的研究项目,并分享了一些关于澳大利亚实践者对澳大利亚人道主义价值观、知识和实践的相关性的看法的初步发现。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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