Periodic Reporting for period 2 - HumanEuroMed (Humanitarianism and Mediterranean Europe: A Transnational and Comparative History (1945-1990))
Période du rapport: 2023-05-01 au 2024-10-31
HumanEuroMed spans up to 1990, when the end of the Cold War drastically changed the structure of international aid. However, the project has much to say about recent developments in international aid. A more profound knowledge of the past allows for a better understanding of the humanitarian dilemmas of the present. HumanEuroMed offers new insights on the humanitarian tensions and challenges the countries of Mediterranean Europe face today.
The main objectives of the project are:
1. Looking at the countries of southern Europe as active players in shaping the international humanitarian regime in the second half of the 20th century.
2. Scrutinising the complex relationship between decolonisation and humanitarianism from the overlooked perspective of Spain, Portugal and Italy, as well as Greece with regard to its relations with Cyprus.
3. Tracing the role of multiple actors (institutions, non-governmental organisations, professionals and experts) in generating transnational networks which connected the countries of Mediterranean Europe among themselves and to the Global South.
4. Exploring the linkages between international relief and national social welfare programmes, and trace the transnational circulation of policies, practices and cultures of social care between the countries of Mediterranean Europe and the Global South.
5. Examining the impact of shifting political and economic contexts (e.g. the end of dictatorship in Portugal, Spain and Greece) on the shaping of humanitarian policies in the countries under investigation.
6. Paying specific attention to the role played by recipients in the co-construction (together with donors) of humanitarian action.
The team members presented the project and its results in numerous international workshops and conferences in Europe and the US. Furthermore, the team organised several workshops at the University of Florence, involving international scholars and other European Universities and Research Centers. Two openly accessible articles are already out, and other publications are under preparation. In particular, our work will appear soon in two major international journals: a special section on intra-southern European aid and a special issue on humanitarianism and decolonization.
The team conducted extensive archival research in Italy, Portugal, Spain, Greece, Croatia, Slovenia, France, Switzerland, UK, USA, Germany, Cyprus. Furthermore, the team has started collecting data about southern European NGOs and their archives, with the goal of creating a map with useful information for future research.
HumanEuroMed challenges this skewed vision. It reframes the history of international aid in the second half of the 20th century by putting the countries of Mediterranean Europe at the centre of its inquiry. The following publications are expected as final outcomes of the project: several articles in national and international journals; two special issues; several chapters in edited volumes; one edited volume; one monography.