During the first phase of the fellowship, in-depth work was carried out in various archives in Rome and the Vatican, Amman, Beirut, Bethlehem, Jerusalem and Geneva. Analysis was presented at conferences and seminars, and led to initial publications. It is now possible to fully reconstruct the history of CNEWA-PMP from its foundation to the present day, and understand its role in the field of philanthropy, social welfare, emergency relief and support for missionaries, by looking at actors, benefactors, modus operandi and motives, as well as identifying norms, patterns, singularities and transformations. The aim is also to provide a bottom-up history, including a focus on the beneficiaries (refugees and people in need, mission and local Churches, orphanages, schools, hospitals) and collaborations on the ground (with agencies like ICRC, Caritas, UNRWA or local authorities), as well as to assess results and effectiveness (duration in camps, number of schools and seminarians, living conditions).
Another objective is to understand how this aid diplomacy emerged in complex political context. What have been the modalities and political underpinnings of Vatican’s diplomacy in relief? How is it related to the role of religion in global politics? This work has been especially carried out as part of two research programmes, GLOBALVAT at the Ecole française de Rome (EFR), and “Humanitaires en guerre mondiale (1939-1956)” in Paris, University Paris 1-Panthéon Sorbonne. Both of these collective programmes focus on unpublished Vatican archives for the period of Pius XII's pontificate (1939-1958), and, in the latter case, Geneva archives (League of Nations, YMCA, ICRC, etc.).
Through comparative analysis as well as discussions with professionals and scientific experts in the field, it has been possible to broaden this analysis and engage the scholarship in humanitarian studies. In addition to the faith-based dimension of humanitarian aid, a new analysis has been initiated regarding the financial mechanisms of humanitarian aid and development within the exploratory workshop ‘It's a rich man's world’ (Beirut, June 2024). Another reflection has been conducted within the framework of a collective programme that investigates the relationship between humanitarian assistance and safeguarding cultural heritage through the role of the Armenian mission, led by the Jesuits from 1881 to 1981 in Central Anatolia and then in Lebanon and Syria.