This article explores how the humanitarian presence and programs in the disputed border area of Abyei between Sudan and South Sudan can be understood as a buffer between conflicting parties, rather than as mere assistance to a displaced population. It aims to contribute to debates about the spatial impact of humanitarian governance and the politicization of aid in protracted crisis contexts, and specifically in relation to territorial disputes and border struggles. It is based on ethnographic fieldwork in South Sudan between 2011 and 2013. The article argues that the humanitarian response became part of the politics of belonging that lies at the heart of the dispute. The very acts of labelling, categorizing, and maintaining the subjects of ...
Kinship and community support-based social security mechanisms are vital for the survival of South S...
The instituted order of humanitarianism is both changing and challenged by shifting circumstances in...
This article argues that peoples’ affective relationships with the specific physical territories tha...
This paper aims to contribute to debates about humanitarian governance and insecurity in post-confli...
This article explores conflicts over local administrative boundaries in South Sudan and what these r...
South Sudanese fled their communities in large numbers following the outbreak of political violence ...
After an internationally recognized referendum on self-determination, South Sudan became independent...
This thesis is concerned with the long-term failure of significant aid investments to improve the ci...
This article explores the complexity of the spatial construction of ethnicity, identity, and sociopo...
This article displays the complexity and ambivalences that emerge as a result of a long-lasting cond...
Sudan has recently separated into two states after a long history of conflict that transformed into ...
In high-conflict scenarios, humanitarian needs often surpass resources, and humanitarians are faced ...
The experiences of those fleeing from Sudan to South Sudan due to the current conflict are shaped by...
The relationship between anthropology and development is very much contested. While the debate about...
The authors argue that the political exclusion of displaced people living within states under a vari...
Kinship and community support-based social security mechanisms are vital for the survival of South S...
The instituted order of humanitarianism is both changing and challenged by shifting circumstances in...
This article argues that peoples’ affective relationships with the specific physical territories tha...
This paper aims to contribute to debates about humanitarian governance and insecurity in post-confli...
This article explores conflicts over local administrative boundaries in South Sudan and what these r...
South Sudanese fled their communities in large numbers following the outbreak of political violence ...
After an internationally recognized referendum on self-determination, South Sudan became independent...
This thesis is concerned with the long-term failure of significant aid investments to improve the ci...
This article explores the complexity of the spatial construction of ethnicity, identity, and sociopo...
This article displays the complexity and ambivalences that emerge as a result of a long-lasting cond...
Sudan has recently separated into two states after a long history of conflict that transformed into ...
In high-conflict scenarios, humanitarian needs often surpass resources, and humanitarians are faced ...
The experiences of those fleeing from Sudan to South Sudan due to the current conflict are shaped by...
The relationship between anthropology and development is very much contested. While the debate about...
The authors argue that the political exclusion of displaced people living within states under a vari...
Kinship and community support-based social security mechanisms are vital for the survival of South S...
The instituted order of humanitarianism is both changing and challenged by shifting circumstances in...
This article argues that peoples’ affective relationships with the specific physical territories tha...