联盟
世界历史
第二次世界大战
叙述的
政治学
政府(语言学)
机构
国家(计算机科学)
自然灾害
第一次世界大战
军事化
公共行政
经济
经济史
经济增长
社会学
历史
法学
地理
古代史
政治
经济
天文
算法
计算机科学
语言学
气象学
哲学
物理
出处
期刊:Moving the Social
[Universitatsbibliothek der Ruhr-Universitat Bochum]
日期:2017-05-31
卷期号:57: 57-76
被引量:1
标识
DOI:10.13154/mts.57.2017.57-76
摘要
This article analyses the development of organised relief for global natural disasters in the years after the First World War, c. 1919 – 1932. It does so by telling two concurrent humanitarian narratives, one focused on a transnational institution, the other on the international affairs of a single nation-state. First, it examines the emergence of the United States as a key figure in global disaster relief at this time. Here, it pays close attention to the transnational connections that American citizens, voluntary associations, and government agencies forged with people in other nations through disaster aid. The article then traces the origins and rise of the League of Red Cross Societies as a leading institution of voluntary transnational disaster assistance during the 1920s and early 1930s, thus recovering the untold history of the organisation’s earliest disaster relief operations. Analysing these narratives in tandem and considering the links between them, I argue, offers important new perspectives on the history of transnational disaster relief at a key stage in its historical development, the interwar years.
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