International humanitarian narratives of disasters, crises, and Indigeneity

Author:

Mosurska Anuszka1ORCID,Clark‐Ginsberg Aaron2,Ford James3,Sallu Susannah M.4,Davis Katy1

Affiliation:

1. PhD Researcher at the Priestley International Centre for Climate University of Leeds United Kingdom

2. Behavioral and Social Scientist at the RAND Corporation United States

3. Priestley Chair in Climate Adaptation at the Priestley International Centre for Climate University of Leeds United Kingdom

4. Associate Professor at the Sustainability Research Institute, School of Earth and Environment University of Leeds United Kingdom

Abstract

Narratives are a means of making sense of disasters and crises. The humanitarian sector communicates stories widely, encompassing representations of peoples and events. Such communications have been critiqued for misrepresenting and/or silencing the root causes of disasters and crises, depoliticising them. What has not been researched is how such communications represent disasters and crises in Indigenous settings. This is important because processes such as colonisation are often at the origin but are typically masked in communications. A narrative analysis of humanitarian communications is employed here to identify and characterise narratives in humanitarian communications involving Indigenous Peoples. Narratives differ based upon how the humanitarians who produce them think that disasters and crises should be governed. The paper concludes that humanitarian communications reflect more about the relationship between the international humanitarian community and its audience than reality, and underlines that narratives mask global processes that link audiences of humanitarian communications with Indigenous Peoples.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Earth and Planetary Sciences,General Social Sciences

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