Humanitarian mobilisation in Central and Eastern Europe

Local, national, and international perspectives

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Manchester University Press
Edited by Doina Anca Cretu, Michal Frankl
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By focusing on aid in Central and Eastern Europe, this volume adds to the existent scholarly explorations of modern humanitarianism, its actors and practices. In the twentieth century, aid workers assisted victims of war and earthquakes, delivered food, supported health care, provided childcare, or sheltered refugees. The contributors not only reconstruct these diverse histories and their protagonists, but also bring international, national, and local actors together: from grassroots activists to private associations to state-driven 'socialist humanitarians' to large Western aid organizations. In doing so, they challenge the often unidirectional, from West-to-East, and asymmetrical perspective on donor-recipient relationships in humanitarian processes.

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Contributor Bio

Doina Anca Cretu is Assistant Professor in Modern European History at University of Warwick.

Michal Frankl was Senior Researcher at the Masaryk Institute and Archives of the Czech Academy of Sciences and Principal Investigator of the ERC Consolidator project 'Unlikely Refuge?'. Currently, he is the head of the Prague Department 'Knowledge and Participation' of the Leibniz-Institute for the History and Culture of Eastern Europe.

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