Historical perspective impacts on changes in humanitarian aid
Research into the history of humanitarian responses has provided a new perspective on emergency aid.
Our findings are important to recent international policy innovations such as the UK International Emergency Trauma Register.
International humanitarian medical relief work dates back to the nineteenth century but our recent research into its historical roots has altered understandings of its past and present.
Our reinterpretation of how humanitarian efforts and technologies are organised and carried out has been taken up by international policy makers, medical practitioners and leading research institutions, with notable testimony to the relevance of the work from The British Academy, Handicap International, Doctors Without Borders and the Red Cross.
Key benefits
Key benefits from the research:
- An engagement in the debates on the key values and principles of Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) – one of the largest medical emergency aid charities
- Creation of the Humanitarian and Conflict Response Institute to drive interdisciplinary academic research on humanitarian aid
- Basis of an online masters qualification, developed in partnership with the International Federation of the Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement, which has over 90 students from over 40 countries
- Creation of the UK International Emergency Trauma Register (UKIETR) to support health professionals wanting to assist in overseas emergencies
Our research
Key findings:
- A genealogy of mid-nineteenth century humanitarian work that is rooted in a missionary and colonial past
- An understanding of the historical past of humanitarian technologies and techniques that influence how aid is delivered and perceived today
- The historical and current interplay between medical interventions and their political context
Professor Taithe's studies on the history and political context of amputation led to his involvement with Handicap International and the UK evaluation of the Haiti relief effort in 2010 funded by the Department for International Development.
His qualitative assessment brought into sharp relief Haitian perspectives on the standards of surgical interventions and poor levels of documentation and coordination in the international effort, observations which led directly to the creation of UKIETR.