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    Taking others in: conceptualising hosting with feminist ethics of care and mutual aid

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    Author(s)
    Caron, Cynthia
    Editor(s)
    Ghosh, Anandita
    Publication date
    2025-02-12
    Subject
    Gender
    Keywords
    Hosting
    humanitarian assistance
    displacement
    mutual aid
    Resilience
    Country
    Sri Lanka
    United States
    
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    Publisher(s)
    Routledge
    Oxfam KEDV
    Oxfam India
    Oxfam Mexico
    Oxfam South Africa
    Oxfam Colombia
    Oxfam Brazil
    Journal
    Gender and Development
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10546/621682
    DOI
    https://doi.org/10.1080/13552074.2024.2406670
    Document type
    Journal article
    Language
    English
    Description
    <html> <head> <title></title> </head> <body> <p>The practice of hosting or families taking in families displaced by conflict or disaster and providing them with shelter has a long history. Since the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami, which affected countries both in South-East and South Asia, humanitarian agencies and donors have been intentional in adding hosting to their repertoire of short-term accommodation strategies to shelter displaced families. Practitioners and donors often argue that hosting is an extension of a culture of hospitality. These actors then leverage an essentialised notion of hospitality to craft assistance packages to encourage hosting and defray some of its associated costs. However, this aligns with the neoliberal turn, as they &#8216;pass off&#8217; shelter responsibilities from host country governments to individual families and communities, assuming displaced families and their hosts will adapt to one another&#8217;s presence until a permanent shelter solution emerges. In this article, I build on my previous work that explored hosting&#8217;s intra-household dynamics. This essay is an opportunity for me to ask new questions about my work on hosting practice and to reconsider hosting through the lens of feminist care ethics and within recent writings on mutual aid in post-disaster contexts. My intention is twofold. First, I hope to offer practice-based recommendations to agencies and donor institutions interested in promoting hosting in disaster response and recovery programming; recommendations that help them to be more intentional about how hosting might be enacted as a form of care and for supporting mutual aid strategies and building solidarity. Second, I contribute to emerging literature on the relationship between neoliberalism and resilience, as I consider hosting as part of the everyday of disaster recovery.</p> </body> </html>
    Pages
    25
    EISSN
    1355-2074
    ISBN
    1364-9221
    ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
    https://doi.org/10.1080/13552074.2024.2406670
    Scopus Count
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