Humanitarian Reason: A Moral History of the Present

In the face of the world’s disorders, moral concerns have provided a powerful ground for developing international as well as local policies. Didier Fassin draws on case materials from France, South Africa, Venezuela, and Palestine to explore the meaning of humanitarianism in the contexts of immigration and asylum, disease and poverty, disaster and war. He traces and analyzes recent shifts in moral and political discourse and practices — what he terms “humanitarian reason”— and shows in vivid examples how humanitarianism is confronted by inequality and violence. Deftly illuminating the tensions and contradictions in humanitarian government, he reveals the ambiguities confronting states and organizations as they struggle to deal with the intolerable. His critique of humanitarian reason, respectful of the participants involved but lucid about the stakes they disregard, offers theoretical and empirical foundations for a political and moral anthropology.

Preface to the English Edition

Acknowledgments

Introduction: Humanitarian Government

PART 1. POLITICS

1. Suffering Unveiled: Listening to the Excluded and the Marginalized

2. Pathetic Choice: Exposing the Misery of the Poor

3. Compassion Protocol: Legalizing Diseased Undocumented Immigrants

4. Truth Ordeal: Attesting Violence for Asylum Seekers

LIMEN. FRONTIERS

5. Ambivalent Hospitality: Governing the Unwanted

PART II. WORLDS

6. Massacre of the Innocents: Representing Childhood in the Age of AIDS

7. Desire for Exception: Managing Disaster Victims

8. Subjectivity without Subjects: Reinventing the Figure of the Witness

9. Hierarchies of Humanity: Intervening in International Conflicts

Conclusion: Critique of Humanitarian Reason

Chronology

Notes

Glossary

Bibliography

Index

Didier Fassin is an anthropologist and a sociologist. Initially trained as a physician at Paris University Pierre et Marie Curie, he practiced internal medicine and taught public health at the Hospital of La Pitié Salpétrière, before turning to the social sciences. Having completed a Master’s degree at La Sorbonne and a PhD at EHESS (the École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales), he became Professor at the University of Paris North and later Director of Studies at EHESS, a position he still holds. At CNRS (the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), he was the founding director of IRIS (the Interdisciplinary Research Institute in Social Sciences). In 2009, he was appointed at the Institute for Advanced Study as the James D. Wolfensohn Professor.

Source: https://www.ias.edu/sss/faculty/fassin

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