Killing Ebola: The Militarization of US Aid in Liberia

In Liberia, the security-development nexus strongly emphasized the security side when Ebola became an international crisis with potential for global risk in 2014. In West Africa, 28,600 people had contracted Ebola and over 11,300 of them died. Liberia was hardest hit with death from the disease, ki...

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Main Author: Calcagno, D
Format: Journal article
Published: Academic Journals 2016
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author Calcagno, D
author_facet Calcagno, D
author_sort Calcagno, D
collection OXFORD
description In Liberia, the security-development nexus strongly emphasized the security side when Ebola became an international crisis with potential for global risk in 2014. In West Africa, 28,600 people had contracted Ebola and over 11,300 of them died. Liberia was hardest hit with death from the disease, killing over 4,800 people. Similar to other interventions after 9/11, the US response to Ebola was intended to be a whole-of-government approach. Nevertheless, its implementation was forged predominantly by the US President’s command that several thousand troops would be deployed. This piece, through an analysis of primary interviews; oral histories of diplomats, military officers, aid workers, doctors, and Ebola treatment personnel; official documents; and other scholarly work undertakes an examination of the effects of the US’ militarized response. The article reveals the disconnect between the construction and health needs of Liberians afflicted with Ebola and the deployment of US combat-oriented troops. In doing so, this article challenges assumptions of the role of the US military in humanitarian crises, as well as the efficacy of aid in the midst of the Ebola outbreak.
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spelling oxford-uuid:6b2ed7bc-6340-440d-8259-ccf469e9c1752022-03-26T19:02:03ZKilling Ebola: The Militarization of US Aid in LiberiaJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:6b2ed7bc-6340-440d-8259-ccf469e9c175Symplectic Elements at OxfordAcademic Journals2016Calcagno, DIn Liberia, the security-development nexus strongly emphasized the security side when Ebola became an international crisis with potential for global risk in 2014. In West Africa, 28,600 people had contracted Ebola and over 11,300 of them died. Liberia was hardest hit with death from the disease, killing over 4,800 people. Similar to other interventions after 9/11, the US response to Ebola was intended to be a whole-of-government approach. Nevertheless, its implementation was forged predominantly by the US President’s command that several thousand troops would be deployed. This piece, through an analysis of primary interviews; oral histories of diplomats, military officers, aid workers, doctors, and Ebola treatment personnel; official documents; and other scholarly work undertakes an examination of the effects of the US’ militarized response. The article reveals the disconnect between the construction and health needs of Liberians afflicted with Ebola and the deployment of US combat-oriented troops. In doing so, this article challenges assumptions of the role of the US military in humanitarian crises, as well as the efficacy of aid in the midst of the Ebola outbreak.
spellingShingle Calcagno, D
Killing Ebola: The Militarization of US Aid in Liberia
title Killing Ebola: The Militarization of US Aid in Liberia
title_full Killing Ebola: The Militarization of US Aid in Liberia
title_fullStr Killing Ebola: The Militarization of US Aid in Liberia
title_full_unstemmed Killing Ebola: The Militarization of US Aid in Liberia
title_short Killing Ebola: The Militarization of US Aid in Liberia
title_sort killing ebola the militarization of us aid in liberia
work_keys_str_mv AT calcagnod killingebolathemilitarizationofusaidinliberia