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A Bed for the Night

Humanitarianism in Crisis

David Rieff

Cover of A Bed for the Night

Timely and controversial, A Bed for the Night reveals how humanitarian organizations trying to bring relief in an ever more violent and dangerous world are often betrayed and misused, and have increasingly lost sight of their purpose.

Humanitarian relief workers, writes David Rieff, are the last of the just. And in the Bosnias, the Rwandas, and the Afghanistan of this world, humanitarianism remains the vocation of helping people when they most desperately need help, when they are lost or stand at risk of losing everything they have, including their lives.

Although humanitarianism's accomplishments have been tremendous, including saving countless lives, the lesson of the past ten years of civil wars and ethnic cleansing is that it can do only so much to alleviate suffering. Aid workers have discovered that while trying to do good, their efforts may also cause harm.

Drawing on firsthand reporting from hot war zones around the world - Bosnia, Rwanda, Congo, Kosovo, Sudan, and most recently Afghanistan - Rieff describes how the International Committee of the Red Cross. Doctors Without Borders, The International Rescue Committee, CARE, Oxfam, and other humanitarian organizations have moved from their founding principle of political neutrality, which gave them access to victims of wars, to encouraging the international community to take action to stop civil wars and ethnic cleansing.

This advocacy has come at a high price. By calling for intervention - whether by the United Nations or by “coalitions of the willing” - humanitarian organizations risk being seen as taking sides in a conflict and thus jeopardizing their access to victims. And by overreaching, the humanitarian movement has allowed itself to be hijacked by the major powers, at times becoming a fig leaf for actions those powers wish to take for their own interests, or for the major powers' inaction. Rieff concludes that if humanitarian organizations are to do what they do best - alleviate suffering - they must reclaim their independence.

Except for relief workers themselves, no one has looked at humanitarian action as seriously or as unflinchingly, or has had such unparalleled access to its inner workings as Rieff, who has traveled and lived with aid workers over many years and four continents.

A cogent, hard-hitting report from the front lines, A Bed for the Night shows what international aid organizations must do if they are to continue to care for the victims of humanitarian disasters.


Table of Contents

Introductionp. 1
Section One: Designated Consciences
1
2
3
The Humanitarian Paradox
The Hazards of Charity
A Saving Idea
p. 31
p. 57
p. 91
Section Two: Dreams and Realities
4
5
Bosnia
Rwanda
p. 123
p. 155
Section Three: The Death of a Good Idea
6:
7:
8:
Kosovo
Afghanistan
Endgame or Rebirth?
p. 197
p. 231
p. 267
Conclusion
A Note on Sources
A Note on Major Humanitarian Organizations
Humanitarian and International Organizations
Acknowledgments
Index
p. 303
p. 337
p. 343
p. 347
p. 349
p. 353



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