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Humanitarian Activism, Social Protection, and Emergent Citizenship in Myanmar

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posted on 2024-10-24, 16:08 authored by Aung Naing

Through the confluent impacts of the Covid-19 pandemic and the 2021 military coup, Myanmar has become a failed state. Deliberate targeting of humanitarian actors by the military junta has severely constrained the activities of international non-governmental organisations and United Nations agencies. In the first three post-coup years, welfare provision to the distressed and displaced were mainly undertaken by local actors who adapted to new conditions of both insecurity and broader economic turmoil. This localised welfare is intertwined with emergent local governance mechanisms, using technology and data analysis to deliver transparent, accountable, and inclusive public service. In the absence of a coherent central state, the social contract of welfare develops at more local levels, generating smaller islands of citizenship from which to build future political communities.

History

Publisher

Institute of Development Studies

Citation

Aung Naing (2024) 'Humanitarian Activism, Social Protection, and Emergent Citizenship in Myanmar', IDS Bulletin 55.2: 121–34, https://doi.org/10.19088/1968-2024.125

Editors

Stephen Devereux Jeremy Lind Keetie Roelen Rachel Sabates-Wheeler

Series

IDS Bulletin 55.2

Volume

55

Issue

2

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

IDS Item Types

Article

Copyright holder

Institute of Development Studies

Country

Myanmar

Language

en

IDS team

Rural Futures

Identifier ISSN

1759-5436

Pagination

121–134

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    Volume 55. Issue 2: Social Protection in a Time of Global Uncertainty

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