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ID170055
Title ProperDoctors with borders
Other Title Informationhierarchies of humanitarians and the Syrian civil war
LanguageENG
AuthorSweis, Rania Kassab
Summary / Abstract (Note)In humanitarian studies, it is typically the white western doctor who stands apart as the cultural prototype or universal figure through which global aid is delivered to vulnerable groups. This article, by contrast, examines the experiences of members of a prominent Syrian-American global medical aid organization. The members of this organization provide life-saving emergency care to millions of Syrians affected by the ongoing civil war, both inside Syria and in surrounding refugee camps. Drawing on over four years (2014–18) of intermittent interviews and observations with these doctors, I suggest that they are positioned precariously within a global “hierarchy of humanitarians” that deems their lives less worthy of mobility and protection than others. In critically analyzing the unequal politics of humanitarianism that exists around the Syrian war, this research complicates our understandings of the givers of global aid, as well as the medical humanitarian encounter itself in times of war.
`In' analytical NoteInternational Journal of Middle East Studies Vol. 51, No.4; Nov 2019: p.587-601
Journal SourceInternational Journal of Middle East Studies 2019-12 51, 4
Key WordsHumanitarianism ;  Ethnography ;  Anthropology ;  Syrian Civil War ;  Doctors