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Holding Hands with Death: Ethical Promises and Political Failures of Our Humanitarian Present: Studies in Critical Social Sciences, cartea 374

Autor Mlado Ivanovic
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 15 oct 2026
You live in a world saturated with images of suffering, appeals to compassion, and calls to care. But why do these moral encounters so often leave the structures of violence untouched? This book offers a critical philosophical account of contemporary regimes of care, showing how compassion, representation, and moral spectatorship can make suffering visible while blunting its political force. Bringing critical theory, phenomenology, and moral and political philosophy into dialogue with scholarship on aid, displacement, and global suffering, it reveals how humanitarianism manages vulnerability rather than confronting the conditions that produce it. For readers concerned with vulnerability, violence, and the demands of justice, this book challenges how you think about care, responsibility, and justice in a world where suffering is made visible even as its structural conditions remain untouched.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9789004768420
ISBN-10: 9004768424
Pagini: 276
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Studies in Critical Social Sciences


Notă biografică

Mlado Ivanovic, Ph.D. (2017), Michigan State University, is a philosopher and humanitarian practitioner whose work brings together humanitarianism, political theory, and social ethics. His research examines how contemporary injustices are reproduced through structural, material, and symbolic forms of violence, particularly in relation to forced displacement and the politics of humanitarian aid. He has taught philosophy at several U.S. universities and has collaborated with humanitarian and refugee-support initiatives in the United States, Serbia, Greece, Turkey, and Malawi. He has also been involved with the Michigan Immigrant and Refugee Council (MIARC). His published work explores the ethical and political dimensions of humanitarianism, forced displacement, and vulnerability.