Affiliation:
1. College of Global Liberal Arts Ritsumeikan University Japan
Abstract
AbstractChinese humanitarian actors have worked frequently with the Chinese diaspora in disaster‐affected areas, but little, if any, research has been conducted into the important role of the diaspora in disaster response and humanitarian assistance. This paper investigates what local knowledge the Chinese diaspora has offered to humanitarian actors from the People's Republic of China (PRC), and how this has contributed to their effectiveness. Based on a case study of the semi‐autonomous Indonesian province of Aceh in the aftermath of the Indian Ocean tsunami of 2004, this paper argues that the diaspora can serve as a linchpin in local and international humanitarian action. It can do so by strengthening networks and bringing together local ethnic communities, local governments, and the PRC's humanitarian actors, while also offering local knowledge in the form of contextual memory. Such local knowledge may have to be fully utilised to address any underlying ethnic tensions in disaster‐affected areas.
Reference47 articles.
1. Building Resilience
2. Chuguo DagongJiuye(2022)‘2022 Quanqiu huazhu zhongxin xinxi daquan: quanqiu huazhu zhongxin dizhi he lianxi fangshi daquan’ (‘2022 global Chinese Help Centre information book: global Chinese Help Centre address and contact information book’). Website.30 May.https://m.hwzpw.com/c_article-a_show-id_85391.html(last accessed on 8 April 2024).
3. Why state legislatures must confront Chinese infiltration;Cunningham M.;The Heritage Foundation website.,2022