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The Suez Crisis of 1956 as a moment of transnational humanitarian engagement
Authors:Esther Moeller
Institution:1. Leibniz Institute of European History, Mainz, Germanymoeller@ieg-mainz.de
Abstract:Abstract

The Suez Crisis of 1956 is generally seen in historical research as a moment both of Great Britain’s imperial decline and of Egyptian and Arab political self-determination in the Middle East. Yet the humanitarian aspect of this crisis is still neglected, even though it provoked important humanitarian engagements from different sides, Arab as well as Western. By focusing on the Red Cross and the Red Crescent Movement, this article investigates not only motives, forms and structures of humanitarian relief, but also analyses the successes and difficulties of transnational co-operation between Western and non-Western agencies with a special focus on the application of the Geneva Conventions of 1949. Finally, the article addresses the political dimension beyond concrete forms of help by arguing that the Suez Crisis attested to both the persistence of post-colonial structures and the institutionalisation of new, transnational patterns of co-operation.
Keywords:Red Cross and Red Crescent  Egypt  Great Britain humanitarianism  Geneva Conventions  prisoners of war
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