The Messy Practice of Decolonising a Concept: Everyday Humanitarianism in Tanzania

Consolata Raphael Sulley, Lisa Ann Richey*

*Corresponding author af dette arbejde

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Abstract

This article1 explores the messy practice of decolonising a concept through collaborative work between scholars researching together the meaning of everyday humanitarianism in Tanzania. Humanitarianism is typically understood as the state-centric, formal, Northern-driven helping of distant others in crisis. Using the concept of everyday humanitarianism, our article challenges these assumptions in three ways. First, it explores the everyday humanitarian actions of ordinary citizens in times of crisis. Second, it explores these responses in a Southern context. Third, it focuses explicitly on the givers and not only the receivers of humanitarian help. Our work grounds decolonisation in the actual practices of research aimed at theory building as an iterative back-and-forth exchange with particular attention to power, rather than as a transplant of Northern theory on the South, or its opposite. Our first argument is that the objective of collaborative research to capture the local politics of giving and then use these practices to interrogate the theoretical concept of everyday humanitarianism can be decolonising. Second, we argue that the practices of the academic labour that produces knowledge or inductive theory can also be decolonising. Understanding both the challenges and the possibilities of decolonising ‘humanitarianism’ will provide an opportunity to document and thus legitimate the complexity that is inherent in decolonising a discipline.
OriginalsprogEngelsk
TidsskriftReview of International Studies
Vol/bind49
Udgave nummer3
Sider (fra-til)390-403
Antal sider14
ISSN0260-2105
DOI
StatusUdgivet - jul. 2023

Emneord

  • African politics
  • Everyday humanitarianism
  • Decolonisation
  • Disaster
  • Humanitarianism
  • North-South relations
  • Research collaboration
  • Tanzania
  • Crisis

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