Description

Book Synopsis


Trade Review

"Mark Duffield's Post-Humanitarianism illustrates how the world of humanitarian emergency provided a practical stage for new forms of knowledge and governing agency, now being generalised across the globe. Brimming with empirical insight and innovative conceptual framings, this book will be a must read for students, academics and practitioners interested in contemporary transformations in development, security and governance and in the need for a critical alternative."
David Chandler, University of Westminster

"In his latest book Mark Duffield combines compelling theoretical insights and practical experience of humanitarian work in Sudan to paint a rather sombre picture of a post-humanitarian world governed increasingly by computers and algorithms. Disasters have long shaped North-South relations, but humanitarianism has become pessimistic towards human agency and its transformative potential to build modern infrastructure protecting people from disasters. The humanitarian sector has adopted post-humanist thinking alienated from human hopes and understanding. Duffield explores 'post-humanitarianism' as 'the international face of post-humanism'. Post-humanitarian alienation shapes the new field of digital humanitarianism and is complicit with a technological barbarism seeking to use digital technology to manage disaster-affected populations and dis-affected people living in precarious conditions. Yet Duffield's book bursts with optimism about humanity's potential to build a better world. His underlying argument is that technocratic cybernetic approaches are not fit for political problems. Only conscious collective human agency and popular accountability may help found a humane world."
Vanessa Pupavac, University of Nottingham



Table of Contents

Preface

Chapter One: Introduction - Questioning Connectivity

Chapter Two: Against Hierarchy

Chapter Three: Entropic Barbarism

Chapter Four: Being There

Chapter Five: Fantastic Invasion

Chapter Six: Livelihood Regime

Chapter Seven: Instilling Remoteness

Chapter Eight: Edge of Catastrophe

Chapter Nine: Connecting Precarity

Chapter Ten: Post-Humanitarianism

Chapter Eleven: Living Wild

Chapter Twelve: Conclusion - Automating Precarity

PostHumanitarianism

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    A Paperback / softback by Mark Duffield

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      Publisher: John Wiley and Sons Ltd
      Publication Date: 02/11/2018
      ISBN13: 9780745698595, 978-0745698595
      ISBN10: 074569859X

      Description

      Book Synopsis


      Trade Review

      "Mark Duffield's Post-Humanitarianism illustrates how the world of humanitarian emergency provided a practical stage for new forms of knowledge and governing agency, now being generalised across the globe. Brimming with empirical insight and innovative conceptual framings, this book will be a must read for students, academics and practitioners interested in contemporary transformations in development, security and governance and in the need for a critical alternative."
      David Chandler, University of Westminster

      "In his latest book Mark Duffield combines compelling theoretical insights and practical experience of humanitarian work in Sudan to paint a rather sombre picture of a post-humanitarian world governed increasingly by computers and algorithms. Disasters have long shaped North-South relations, but humanitarianism has become pessimistic towards human agency and its transformative potential to build modern infrastructure protecting people from disasters. The humanitarian sector has adopted post-humanist thinking alienated from human hopes and understanding. Duffield explores 'post-humanitarianism' as 'the international face of post-humanism'. Post-humanitarian alienation shapes the new field of digital humanitarianism and is complicit with a technological barbarism seeking to use digital technology to manage disaster-affected populations and dis-affected people living in precarious conditions. Yet Duffield's book bursts with optimism about humanity's potential to build a better world. His underlying argument is that technocratic cybernetic approaches are not fit for political problems. Only conscious collective human agency and popular accountability may help found a humane world."
      Vanessa Pupavac, University of Nottingham



      Table of Contents

      Preface

      Chapter One: Introduction - Questioning Connectivity

      Chapter Two: Against Hierarchy

      Chapter Three: Entropic Barbarism

      Chapter Four: Being There

      Chapter Five: Fantastic Invasion

      Chapter Six: Livelihood Regime

      Chapter Seven: Instilling Remoteness

      Chapter Eight: Edge of Catastrophe

      Chapter Nine: Connecting Precarity

      Chapter Ten: Post-Humanitarianism

      Chapter Eleven: Living Wild

      Chapter Twelve: Conclusion - Automating Precarity

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