Imposing Aid - Emergency Assistance to Refugees

Author(s)
Harrell-Bond, B.E.
Publication language
English
Pages
435pp
Date published
01 Jan 1986
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Type
Books
Keywords
Evaluation-related, Forced displacement and migration
Countries
Sudan

This book is the first independent appraisal of an assistance programme mounted by international agencies in response to an emergency influx of refugees - in this case the Ugandans who spilled out over the Sudan border from the early months of 1982. 

 

This book represents an opportunity to see beyond the "starving child" image of the refugee. Every year relief budgets climb and humanitarian agencies proliferate in response to media appeals to save yet another population of starving, "helpless" refugees. But what happens after the cameras leave? What is the impact of the millions which are spent? What is the effect of the work of the humanitarians who are propelled into the field, and to whom are they accountable? "Imposing Aid" provides an independent appraisal of an assistance programme mounted by international UN and voluntary agencies in response to an emergency influx of refugees. The refugees in question were the Ugandans who spilled out over the Sudan border from the early months of 1982, but the findings have far reaching implications for policy throughout Africa and beyond. The data presented includes interviews with 6000 households, both in camps and with the greater number who struggled to survive outside the aid "umbrella". The findings of the research are all the more disturbing as this particular assistance was considered to be one of the more successful.