Compromising Aid to Protect International Staff: The Politics of Humanitarian Threat Perception after the Arab Uprisings

IF 1.7 Q2 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
E. Scott
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引用次数: 5

Abstract

Scholars expect operational compromises by humanitarian organizations to follow attacks on aid workers. However, in response to the War in Syria, organizations compromised aid and adopted clandestine, cross-border, remote management, and conflict-actor aligned approaches, which best protected international aid workers. This was despite declining rates of attack against them, relative to their national staff counterparts. This article asks why international aid workers were withdrawn and aid was compromised in the wake of the Arab Uprisings by traditional risk-taking organizations: Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) and the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC). Drawing on political ethnography and interviews with aid workers, I show that shocking violent events, everyday insecurity, and changes in the nature of threat have significant effect on threat perception and explain compromises where rates of attack do not. This paper offers a picture of the micro- and field-level foundations of organizational threat perception and decisions about whose security matters.
妥协援助以保护国际工作人员:阿拉伯起义后人道主义威胁感知的政治
学者们预计,人道主义组织会在救援人员遇袭后做出行动妥协。然而,在应对叙利亚战争的过程中,各组织在援助方面做出了妥协,采取了秘密、跨境、远程管理和与冲突行为方一致的方法,这些方法最好地保护了国际援助工作者。尽管与本国工作人员相比,针对他们的攻击率有所下降。这篇文章提出了一个问题,为什么在阿拉伯起义之后,国际援助工作者被传统的冒险组织——无国界医生组织(MSF)和红十字国际委员会(ICRC)——撤回,援助受到损害。根据政治人种学和对援助工作者的采访,我表明,令人震惊的暴力事件、日常的不安全感和威胁性质的变化对威胁感知有重大影响,并解释了攻击率没有影响的妥协。本文提供了微观和实地层面的组织威胁感知和决定谁的安全问题的基础。
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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来源期刊
Journal of Global Security Studies
Journal of Global Security Studies INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS-
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
6.20%
发文量
34
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