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New Book! Love and Liberation: Humanitarian Work in Ethiopia’s Somali Region

By Lauren Carruth, MS, PhD

Release Date: September 15, 2021

Lauren Carruth's Love and Liberation tells a new kind of humanitarian story—the protagonists are not volunteers from afar, but rather, are Somali locals caring for each other: nurses, aid workers, policymakers, drivers, community health workers, and bureaucrats. The contributions of locals are often taken for granted, and the competencies, aspirations, and effectiveness of local staffers frequently remain muted or absent from the planning and evaluations of humanitarian interventions structured by outsiders. Relief work is traditionally imagined as politically neutral and impartial, and interventions are planned as temporary, extraordinary, and distant. 

Carruth provides an alternative vision of what "humanitarian" response means in practice—not driven by International Humanitarian Law, the missions of Western relief organizations, or trends in the aid industry or academia, but instead, by what Somalis call "samafal." Samafal is structured by the cultivation of lasting relationships of care, interdependence, kinship, and ethnic solidarity. Samafal is also explicitly political and potentially emancipatory: humanitarian responses present opportunities for Somalis to begin to redress histories of colonial partitions and to make the most out of their political and economic marginalization. By centering Love and Liberation around Somalis' understandings and enactments of samafal, Carruth offers a new perspective on politics and intervention in Africa.

PRAISE:

"Love and Liberation holds many deep and important lessons for us all. In it, Lauren Carruth focuses our attention on where it should be: the thoughts and reactions of recipients of traditional humanitarian assistance." Ron Waldman, Milken Institute School of Public Health, George Washington University

"Compelling and convincing, Love and Liberation provides important contributions to our understandings of humanitarian work in Ethiopia." Lahra Smith, Georgetown University, author of Making Citizens in Africa


About Me

I am an ethnographer of humanitarian assistance and global health interventions, with training in medical anthropology, nutrition science, and humanitarian policy and practice. My research draws on long-term ethnographic as well as collaborative epidemiological, biological, and policy research in the Horn of Africa. In general, my work demonstrates how enduring social, historical, and institutional inequities shape humanitarian interventions, disease transmission, health outcomes, and population displacement and migration. My research has four themes: (1) Institutional and community-based ethnography of the humanitarian aid industry, (2) Ethnography and ecology of infectious zoonotic diseases, (3) Ethnography of diabetes in food insecure and crisis-affected communities, (4) Ethnography of the violence of migration from Ethiopia to the Gulf States.