Universiteit Leiden

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Lecture

ASCL Seminar: The State in Relief: civil servants navigating duties, dependencies and disasters in Malawi

Date
Thursday 5 September 2024
Time
Address
Herta Mohrgebouw
Witte Singel 27A
2311 BG Leiden
Room
Room 0.31

Malawi is a donor-dependent country in southern Africa, at the forefront of experiencing the intensifying impacts of climate change. This talk by Dr Tanja Hendriks (KU Leuven) focuses on the everyday practices of civil servants in disaster relief interventions in Malawi, to show how the state is central to disaster governance despite its lack of resources and actual capacity to deal with them. Operating at the heart of the humanitarian-development nexus, the Malawi government Department of Disaster Management Affairs (DODMA) is responsible for the coordination of both ad hoc responses to disasters and more long-term, recurring humanitarian interventions, both of which frequently take place.

Based on ethnographic fieldwork conducted in the aftermath of Cyclone Idai (2019), Cyclone Freddy (2023) and an El Niňo-induced drought (2024), Dr Hendriks zooms in on different characteristics of disaster governance, detailing how DODMA civil servants navigated the numerous demands placed on them by colleagues, citizens, chiefs and (international) collaborators alike as they attempted to fulfill their duties in a context of dependencies and destitution. Conceptualising the state as instantiated relationally, Hendriks argues that these relief interventions throw the state itself into relief, rendering visible civil servants’ sense of duty while simultaneously highlighting what it is up against.

More information and registration.

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