When the Music Stops - Humanitarianism in a Post-Liberal World Order

Author(s)
Hopgood, S.
Publication language
English
Pages
11pp
Date published
01 Jan 2019
Publisher
Journal of Humanitarian Affairs (Manchester University Press)
Type
Articles
Keywords
Development & humanitarian aid, humanitarian action, Protection, human rights & security

The modern global humanitarian system takes the form it does because it is underpinned by liberal world order. Now the viability of global liberal institutions is increasingly in doubt, a backlash against humanitarianism (and human rights) has gained momentum. This article argues that without liberal world order, global humanitarianism as we currently understand it is impossible, confronting humanitarians with an existential choice: how might they function in a world which doesn’t have liberal institutions at its core? The version of global humanitarianism with which we are familiar might not survive this transition, but maybe other forms of humanitarian action will emerge. What comes next might not meet the hopes of today’s humanitarians, however. The humanitarian alliance with liberalism is no accident, and if the world is less liberal, its version of humanitarian action is likely to be less liberal too. Nevertheless, humanitarianism will fare better than its humanist twin, human rights, in this new world.

Authors: 
Hopgood, S.