This book provides a new approach to understanding the histories of refugee resettlement and their relevance for contemporary emergencies. By drawing on histories of faith-based humanitarianism from 1917 to the present, it explores how faith-based organisations have engaged with refugee aid and the efforts of other secular humanitarian movements.
These understandings of humanitarianism and refugee resettlement are developed through the lens of faith-based histories and intersections with secular humanitarian movements. The book uses these histories to understand trends in humanitarian development and interactions between multiple organisations that have held ongoing roles in refugee emergencies. Exploring interactions between these organisations provides new ways of understanding humanitarianism and trends in the delivery of refugee aid. As the number of refugees requiring assistance continues to increase globally, understanding trends in this historical development has never been more important.
This gives new ways to understand the provision of refugee aid via a broad spectrum of organisations rather than groups from separate categories acting in isolation. Despite the frequent marginalisation of faith-based organisations, the book shows they have reframed humanitarian efforts. This provides researchers, policy makers and practitioners with new ways to approach this challenge and the historical development of refugee aid.
This book provides a new approach to understanding the histories of refugee resettlement and their relevance for contemporary emergencies.
1. Rediscovering Humanitarianism: Using a Faith-Based Lens to Uncover
Histories and New Aspects of Humanitarian Aid for Refugees
2. Medical
Missionaries and the Humanitarian Subject: The American Womens Hospital,
Faith-Based and Secular Humanitarianism, 1917-1939
3. Training the Friends
Relief Service for the Refugee Problem at Mount Waltham, 1943
4. A Mission
Field, Backwards: World Relief and American Evangelicals in U.S. Refugee
Resettlement
5. Religious Humanitarianism in Post-War Queensland, Australia:
Spiritual Guidance, Evangelism, or Humanitarian Aid?
6. Australian Baptist
Missionaries, Humanitarianism and the Bangladesh Liberation War in 1971
7.
DIY Aid in Poland: How Grassroots Humanitarianism Helped Ukrainian Refugees
8. Conclusion: Legacies of Faith-Based Humanitarianism and Contemporary
Refugee Emergencies
Jessica Stroja is an Adjunct Research Fellow in the Centre for Social and Cultural Research, Griffith University, Australia, and specialises in heritage and the resettlement of refugees. Her recent work focuses on the role of faith-based organisations in the care and advocacy for refugees in Australia during the twentieth century.