ABSTRACT

This book provides a historical inquiry into the quantification of needs in humanitarian assistance. Needs are increasingly seen as the lowest common denominator of humanity. Standard definitions of basic needs, however, set a minimalist version of humanity – both in the sense that they are narrow in what they compare, and that they set a low bar for satisfaction. The book argues that we cannot understand humanitarian governance if we do not understand how humanitarian agencies made human suffering commensurable across borders in the first place.

The book identifies four basic elements of needs: As a concept, as a system of classification and triage, as a material apparatus, and as a set of standards. Drawing on a range of archival sources, including the United Nations Refugee Agency (UNHCR), Médecins sans Frontières (MSF), and the Sphere Project, the book traces the concept of needs from its emergence in the 1960s right through to the present day, and United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon’s call for “evidence-based humanitarianism.” Finally, the book assesses how the international governmentality of needs has played out in a recent humanitarian crisis, drawing on field research on Central African refugees in the Cameroonian borderland in 2014–2016.

This important historical inquiry into the universal nature of human suffering will be an important read for humanitarian researchers and practitioners, as well as readers with an interest in international history and development.

The Introduction, Conclusion, and Chapers 1, 4, 5, and 6 of this book are freely available as downloadable Open Access PDFs at https://www.taylorfrancis.com under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives (CC-BY-NC-ND) 4.0 license. 

chapter |27 pages

Introduction

Minimal humanity – the commensuration of human suffering on a global scale

chapter 1|40 pages

Concepts

Elements of a genealogy of needology

chapter 2|24 pages

Classifications

UNHCR and the legibility of refugees in Central Africa

chapter 3|30 pages

Artifacts

Malnutrition, MUAC, and the materialization of anthropometry

chapter 4|48 pages

Standards

The Sphere Project and the universalization of the vital minimum after Goma

chapter 5|41 pages

Registration

Refugees and the emergence of the humanitarian field in Cameroon

chapter 6|32 pages

Vulnerability

Impartial algorithms and analog malnutrition

chapter |13 pages

Conclusion

Infrastructure of commensurability