The COVID-19 pandemic and its response has brought power structures and cultural biases within the humanitarian scene to the forefront yet again, sparking discussions on differential treatment between local and international staff and on the global distribution of funds and equipment. Part of this picture is how the "corona crisis" is represented in the media as a "humanitarian problem," and how policy-makers and practitioners are thinking about humanitarian responses in this setting.
In this webinar, we wish to examine the field of humanitarian studies as part of this broader picture. The field of humanitarian studies is itself criticized for being centred on the "Global North" and defined by Eurocentric perspectives. As a parallel to the agenda of 'localising humanitarian aid,' efforts are being made at countering this tendency by including scholars and perceptions from "the Global South."
By using the pandemic as a point of entry, we attempt to explore how humanitarian crises are understood and interpreted in the field of humanitarian studies, and how voices from the Global South can contribute to better understandings:
- What would it take to ensure that humanitarian studies serve as a corrective to biased international responses?
- What sort of knowledge and which organisational measures are needed to inform efforts at making the humanitarian system more globally representative and assistance more locally led?
Timezone in Oslo: 10:00-11:00 (GMT+2).
This webinar can be viewed from anywhere in the world online using Microsoft Teams. Click here to join.
Program:
10:00-10:10 Introduction by Dorothea Hilhorst (International Institute of Social Studies)
10:10-10:45 Panel discussion
Speakers: Mihir Bhatt (All India Disaster Mitigation Institute), Tanya Wood (CHS Alliance), Kristoffer Lidén (PRIO)
Moderator: Dorothea Hilhorst
10:45-11:00 Q&A