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Disquieting Gifts

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While most people would not consider sponsoring an orphan's education to be in the same category as international humanitarian aid, both acts are linked by the desire to give. Many studies focus on...
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  • 30 May 2012
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While most people would not consider sponsoring an orphan's education to be in the same category as international humanitarian aid, both acts are linked by the desire to give. Many studies focus on the outcomes of humanitarian work, but the impulses that inspire people to engage in the first place receive less attention. Disquieting Gifts takes a close look at people working on humanitarian projects in New Delhi to explore why they engage in philanthropic work, what humanitarianism looks like to them, and the ethical and political tangles they encounter.

Motivated by debates surrounding Marcel Mauss's The Gift, Bornstein investigates specific cases of people engaged in humanitarian work to reveal different perceptions of assistance to strangers versus assistance to kin, how the impulse to give to others in distress is tempered by its regulation, suspicions about recipient suitability, and why the figure of the orphan is so valuable in humanitarian discourse. The book also focuses on vital humanitarian efforts that often go undocumented and ignored and explores the role of empathy in humanitarian work.

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Price: $28.00
Pages: 232
Publisher: Stanford University Press
Imprint: Stanford University Press
Series: Stanford Studies in Human Rights
Publication Date: 30 May 2012
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780804770026
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

"Following up her earlier book The Spirit of Development: Protestant NGOs, morality, and economics in Zimbabwe, [in Disquieting Gifts, Bornstein] analyses examples of the whole spectrum of charity and volunteering in India, including both international aid and intra-Indian giving. The extreme contrasts of living standards in India, and the coexistence there of entrenched religious practices and secularism, stimulate Bornstein to delineate a "global economy of giving" while questioning Western preconceptions about humanitarianism."—Jonathan Benthall, Times Literary Supplement
Erica Bornstein is Associate Professor of Anthropology at University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. She is author of The Spirit of Development: Protestant NGOs, Morality, and Economics in Zimbabwe (Stanford, 2005).