Aid work as edgework - voluntary risk-taking and security in humanitarian assistance, development and human rights work
Aid work as edgework - voluntary risk-taking and security in humanitarian assistance, development and human rights work
Contemporary societies have been characterized as risk societies. While considerable research on individualized risk and risk management exists, voluntary risk taking has so far found less attention. This article explores the tensions between voluntary risk-taking at the individual level and risk management at the organizational level by analysing aid work as edgework. Between 1990s and 2009, the number of attacks on aid personnel including killing, kidnapping and armed attacks has steadily increased. Security and how to deal with it has become a central concern of aid organizations. While the increased insecurity of aid workers and the responses of aid organizations to security threats have been widely documented, less attention has been paid to the role risk-taking plays in aid workers lives. Edgework is a form of voluntary risk-taking and has been primarily studied in the context of risk-taking leisure such as action and adventure sport. Aid work encompasses a wide range of interventions, including development and emergency relief. Depending on assignment and region, people working in the aid industry find themselves in high- or low-risk situations. Based on biographical interviews with people working in aid, this article addresses motivations for getting involved in aid work and experiences of danger in Aidland. Contrasting individualized risks with security procedures of aid organizations, my article contributes to a better understanding of risk-taking behaviour in general and in the context of overseas aid in particular
voluntary risk-taking, edgework, humanitarianism, self-government, self-realization
139-155
Roth, Silke
cd4e63d8-bd84-45c1-b317-5850d2a362b6
February 2015
Roth, Silke
cd4e63d8-bd84-45c1-b317-5850d2a362b6
Roth, Silke
(2015)
Aid work as edgework - voluntary risk-taking and security in humanitarian assistance, development and human rights work.
Journal of Risk Research, 18 (2), .
(doi:10.1080/13669877.2013.875934).
Abstract
Contemporary societies have been characterized as risk societies. While considerable research on individualized risk and risk management exists, voluntary risk taking has so far found less attention. This article explores the tensions between voluntary risk-taking at the individual level and risk management at the organizational level by analysing aid work as edgework. Between 1990s and 2009, the number of attacks on aid personnel including killing, kidnapping and armed attacks has steadily increased. Security and how to deal with it has become a central concern of aid organizations. While the increased insecurity of aid workers and the responses of aid organizations to security threats have been widely documented, less attention has been paid to the role risk-taking plays in aid workers lives. Edgework is a form of voluntary risk-taking and has been primarily studied in the context of risk-taking leisure such as action and adventure sport. Aid work encompasses a wide range of interventions, including development and emergency relief. Depending on assignment and region, people working in the aid industry find themselves in high- or low-risk situations. Based on biographical interviews with people working in aid, this article addresses motivations for getting involved in aid work and experiences of danger in Aidland. Contrasting individualized risks with security procedures of aid organizations, my article contributes to a better understanding of risk-taking behaviour in general and in the context of overseas aid in particular
Text
Roth Edgework JfRR accepted.docx
- Accepted Manuscript
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 1 October 2013
e-pub ahead of print date: 24 January 2014
Published date: February 2015
Keywords:
voluntary risk-taking, edgework, humanitarianism, self-government, self-realization
Organisations:
Sociology, Social Policy & Criminology
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 361716
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/361716
ISSN: 1366-9877
PURE UUID: d75d68c1-9e2b-4578-a47a-6b4472f63c70
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Date deposited: 31 Jan 2014 11:28
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:25
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