The Humanitarians' Tragedy: Escapable and Inescapable Cruelties

TitleThe Humanitarians' Tragedy: Escapable and Inescapable Cruelties
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2010
AuthorsWaal, Alexander de
JournalDisasters
Volume34
IssueS2
PaginationS130-S137
Date Published03/2010
Abstract

Paradoxically, elements of cruelty are intrinsic to the humanitarian enterprise. This paper focuses on some of these. Escapable cruelties arise from technical failings, but the gradual professionalisation of the field and improvements in relief technologies mean that they have been significantly reduced in comparison to earlier eras. Other cruelties arise from clashes among rights, and the tensions inherent in trying to promote humanity amid the horrors of war. These are inescapable and constitute the ‘humanitarians' tragedy’. Among them is the individual cruelty of failing to do good at the margin: a clash between the individual's impulses and ideals and the constraints of operating in constrained circumstances. This is a version of triage. In addition, there is the cruelty of compromising dearly-held principles when faced with other competing or overriding demands. There is also the cruelty whereby humanitarians feed victims' dreams that there is an alternative reality, which in fact cannot be attained.

URLhttps://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1467-7717.2010.01149.x
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