Enmity then empathy: How militarisation facilitated collaborative but exclusive exchange in Sierra Leone's Ebola response

Author:

Boland Samuel T.1ORCID,Mayhew Susannah H.2,Rohan Hana3,Lillywhite Louis4,Balabanova Dina5

Affiliation:

1. Academy Associate at Chatham House United Kingdom

2. Faculty of Public Health and Policy, Department of Global Health and Development London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine United Kingdom

3. Center for Global Health Science and Security, Department of Microbiology and Immunology Georgetown University United States

4. Centre for Universal Health Chatham House United Kingdom

5. Health Systems and Policy Unit, Department of Global Health and Development, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine United Kingdom

Abstract

AbstractIn the autumn of 2014, with the 2013–16 West Africa Ebola epidemic spiralling out of control, the United Kingdom announced a bespoke military mission to support—and in some ways lead—numerous Ebola response functions in Sierra Leone. This study examines the nature and effect of the civil‐military relationships that subsequently developed between civilian and military Ebola response workers (ERWs). In total, 110 interviews were conducted with key involved actors, and the findings were analysed by drawing on the neo‐Durkheimian theory of organisations. This paper finds that stereotypical opposition between humanitarian and military actors helps to explain how and why there was initial cooperative and collaborative challenges. However, all actors were found to have similar hierarchical structures and operations, which explains how and why they were later able to cooperate and collaborate effectively. It also explains how and why civilian ERWs might have served to exclude and further marginalise some local actors.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference87 articles.

1. Elementary Forms and their Dynamics: Revisiting Mary Douglas

2. Albrecht P.andP.Jackson(2009)Security System Transformation in Sierra Leone 1997–2007. February. Global Facilitation Network for Security Sector Reform Birmingham and International Alert London.

3. Alejandria M.C.P.et al. (2022)Humanitarian‐Military Relations in Complex Emergencies: Evidence Insights and Recommendations. May. Center for Human Rights and Humanitarian Studies Watson Institute for International and Public Affairs Brown University Providence RI.

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