In migration studies, humanitarian work and workers are studied as benefactors or managers of migrants and refugees. Th is article inverts the gaze from “researching down” refugees to “studying up” the humanitarian structure that governs them. Th e article studies how the humanitarian industry ballooned aft er the Syrian refugee response in Jordan due to the infl ux of expatriate humanitarians as economic migrants from the global North to refugee situations in the host country in the global South. It examines the global division of mobility and labo r among expatriate, local, and refugee humanitarian workers, investigating the correlation between geographic (horizontal) mobility and social/professional (vertical) mobility, demonstrating that the social and professional mobility of workers depends on their ability to access geographic mobility. Th us, rather than advocating for and facilitating global mobility, the humanitarian industry maintains a colonial division of labor and mobility. Th is raises the question: who benefi ts most from humanitarian assistance?
CITATION STYLE
Farah, R. (2020). Expat, Local, and Refugee “Studying Up” the Global Division of Labor and Mobility in the Humanitarian Industry in Jordan. Migration and Society, 3(1), 130–144. https://doi.org/10.3167/arms.2020.030111
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