The Pratiques & Humanités series regroups synthetic documents that aim to communicate the results of research supported in the form of a 4-page leaflet. Its goal is to make these results more accessible, in a clear style, without the use of jargon or overly theoretical terms, and with a focus on the practical implications of the research results for humanitarian or social actors.

N° 2 - July 2021

ONG locales et reconstruction du système de santé publique au nord de la Côte d’Ivoire

• Auteur : Toily Anicet ZRAN Département d’Histoire de l’Université Alassane Ouattara de Bouaké (Côte d’Ivoire) In french only

Fiche projet
N°5-July 2022

Enhanced home support services: What contribution to the fight against isolation?

N° 1 - February 2021

The fight against malnutrition in Côte d’Ivoire: a critical assessment of community participation

• Author: Edouard Kouadio KOUASSI Agro-Economy and Rural Development Laboratory / CRDs - Alassane Ouattara University of Bouaké In french only

Fiche projet
N°15 - November 2022

The humanitarian economy: a trap for urban food security

Roberta RUBINO, PhD in Ethnology and Social Anthropology at EHESS, postdoctoral fellow at the UMR "Development and Society" of IEDES, University of Paris I Panthéon-Sorbonne, in partnership with IRD (Institut de recherche pour le développement)   In French only, translation in progress

N°17 - November 2022

Medical evacuation: the patient experience

Alice SERVY, lecturer in anthropology at the University of Strasbourg, attached to the "Societies, Actors, Government in Europe" Laboratory.   In French only, translation in progress

N°12 - October 2022

Exiled women facing denial of rights and gender-based violence

Nina SAHRAOUI, sociologue, mène le projet de recherche Marie Sklodowska-Curie CYBERGEN au GTM-CRESPPA (CNRS).   In French only, translation in progress

N°8 - Septembre 2022

Why and what for?

This research is based on the construction of a reflexive inquiry with French Red Cross volunteers within the framework of a systemic approach in order to understand why - how - and for what - for what purpose - they have committed themselves to social action. Using this approach, Ms. Bonzi, PhD in Anthropology (EHESS, 2019), measures the gaps between what a person imagines and desires when committing themselves and the reality of a difficult daily life where they come up against poverty. This action research questions the purpose of commitment, for volunteers, for the Red Cross and for public policy, and provides the Red Cross with tested and evaluated tools for understanding, analyzing and reacting to volunteer disengagement.