【国際慣行における新たな人道主義】
The New Humanitarians in International Practice(Routledge Humanitarian Studies) H 394 p. 15
目次
Introduction: New humanitarians getting old? Part 1 A brief history of humanitarian actors and the humanitarian principles 1. A brief history of humanitarian actors and principles Part 2 New donor humanitarianism 2. India as humanitarian actor: Convergences and divergences with DAC-Donor principles and practices 3. Turkey as a rising power: An emerging global humanitarian actor Part 3 Multi-Mandate organisations and developmental humanitarianism 4. Multi-Mandate organisations in humanitarian aid Part 4 Armed humanitarianism 5. Blurred lines, shrunken space? Offensive peacekeepers, networked humanitarians and the performance of principle in Democratic Republic Congo 6. Rebels without borders: Armed groups as humanitarian actors 7. The military, the private sector and traditional humanitarian actors: Interaction, interoperability and effectiveness Part 5 Private humanitarianism 8. Business in humanitarian crises – For better or for worse? 9. Humanitarian action for sale : Private military and security companies in the humanitarian space Part 6 Diaspora humanitarianism 10. Diaspora humanitarianism: The invisibility of a third humanitarian domain 11. Diaspora humanitarianism: Implications for the humanitarian action in Syria and neighbouring countries Part 7 Faith-Based humanitarianism 12. International Muslim NGOs: "Added value" or an echo of Western principles and donor wishes? 13. Writing the other into humanitarianism: A conversation between "South-South" and "faith-based" humanitarianisms Part 8 Regional and local humanitarianism 14. Regional organisations and the humanitarian system: History, trends and implications 15. Traditional and non-traditional humanitarian actors in disaster response in India Conclusion