This book assesses whether humanitarian agencies should withdraw assistance from current aid recipients to avoid exacerbating ongoing conflicts and preserve lives by withdrawing or reallocating aid. In considering this humanitarian assistance dilemma, the book explores the moral cost of withdrawing essential relief aid and assistance.
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"This is a very important contribution to the growing field of humanitarian ethics. Exit ethics will become more pressing in humanitarian policy as climate emergency, authoritarianism and budget cuts increase around the world. Chin Ruamps delivers an original approach which avoids the misleading simplicity of utilitarian arguments to focus on human values, binding relationships and moral obligations. A vital read."
Hugo Slim, Las Casas Institute for Social Justice, University of Oxford, UK
Hugo Slim, Las Casas Institute for Social Justice, University of Oxford, UK