Nationalizing international relief : Romanian responses to American aid for children in the Great War era
License
Access Rights
Cadmus Permanent Link
Full-text via DOI
ISBN
ISSN
1350-7486; 1469-8293
Issue Date
Type of Publication
Keyword(s)
LC Subject Heading
Other Topic(s)
EUI Research Cluster(s)
Initial version
Published version
Succeeding version
Preceding version
Published version part
Earlier different version
Initial format
Author(s)
Citation
European review of history, 2020, Vol. 27, No. 4, pp. 527-547
Cite
CRETU, Doina Anca, Nationalizing international relief : Romanian responses to American aid for children in the Great War era, European review of history, 2020, Vol. 27, No. 4, pp. 527-547 - https://hdl.handle.net/1814/70154
Abstract
This article examines the interactions between American humanitarian agendas and initiatives and domestic efforts for child relief in Romania in the aftermath of the Great War. While focusing on the presence of the European Children's Fund (ECF) in post-war Romania, the article traces the domestic organization of relief, the Romanian elites' turn to American humanitarian assistance, and their active responses to this external aid on behalf of war-suffering children. The article argues that Romanian leadership of child welfare initiatives nationalized American humanitarian aid by integrating ECF's institutional efforts into domestically established philanthropic associations. This nationalization was sustained in three key ways : (1) American humanitarians' own engagement of local channels in aid diffusion; (2) the growing network of national associations of child welfare in post-war Romania; (3) the competing political agendas of both donors and recipients. The case of Romanian responses to American aid for children, and its eventual domestic institutionalization, challenges the seemingly unequal relationship between Western donors and East-Central European recipients during a period of post-war reconstruction and sociopolitical transformation. It sheds light on the transnational dimension of the humanitarian process, driven by the dual agency of foreign humanitarians and domestic interlocutors in the country of aid reception.
Table of Contents
Additional Information
First published online: 03 February 2020

