Refugee Survey Quarterly
Volume 38, Issue 3, 2019, Pages 245-265
Subversive humanitarianism: Rethinking refugee solidarity through grass-roots initiatives (Article)
Vandevoordt R.*
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a
Department of Development Studies, Refugee Studies Centre, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom
Abstract
Across Europe, hundreds of thousands of volunteers have brought food, clothes, medicines, and numerous others forms of support to newly arrived refugees. While humanitarian action has always been subversive, I argue that the recent wave of civil actions has pushed its subversive effects one step further. Whereas more modest forms of humanitarian action tend to misrecognise recipients' social and political subjectivities, their more subversive counterparts can be better understood as enacting a particularistic form of solidarity that emphasises precisely those subjectivities. To explore the potential for political innovation in these civil initiatives, I argue that it can be useful to do so through the lens of “subversive humanitarianism”. More concretely, I suggest the following seven dimensions with which the subversive character of any humanitarian action can be compared across time and space: acts of civil disobedience; the reconstitution of social subjects; contending symbolic spaces; the creation of social spaces and personal bonds; assuming equality; putting minds into motion; and the transformation of individuals' life-worlds. I support the argument by drawing upon the recent wave of empirical studies on civil initiatives across the continent as well as my own ethnographic data on the Brussels-based Plateforme Citoyenne de Soutien aux Réfugiés. © Author(s) [2019]. All rights reserved. For permissions, please email:
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Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85074166150&doi=10.1093%2frsq%2fhdz008&partnerID=40&md5=969e78ed7e930d7a4f6c169ce75677b3
DOI: 10.1093/rsq/hdz008
ISSN: 10204067
Cited by: 1
Original Language: English