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Inaugural Lecture by Lisa Ann Richey


Date and time

Thursday 21. February 2019 at 15:00 to 17:00

Registration Deadline

Wednesday 20. February 2019 at 09:00

Location

2V.071, Dalgas Have 15, 2000 Frederiksberg 2V.071
Dalgas Have 15
2000 Frederiksberg

Inaugural Lecture by Lisa Ann Richey


Event Description

Department of Management, Society and Communciation invites you to the inaugural lecture by Professor Lisa Ann Richey

Lisa Richey

Commodifying Compassion: Linking Ethical Consumption with Everyday Humanitarianism

Have you purchased a bottle of Kildevæld water that promises clean water for African children, bought a soft toy from IKEA for families affected by disaster, or perhaps drank a ‘cup of hope’ with Starbucks coffee from Eastern Congo? Today’s marketplace is inundated with products supporting humanitarian causes that promise to give aid to distant beneficiaries, provide ‘good feelings’ to consumers and promote the brands of corporations and humanitarian NGOs. These ‘Brand Aid’ initiatives provide a neoliberal solution to humanitarian crises and sustainable development challenges by linking privatized politics of consumption to global change. My inaugural lecture will draw on two decades of research examining the relationships between global values and local practices of ‘humanitarianism’ to understand how ‘helping’ has become a marketable commodity and how this impacts humanitarianism both symbolically and materially.

This lecture will explore the implications of commodifying compassion for business, politics and individual social relations. 

Lisa Ann Richey is Professor of Globalization in the Department of Management, Society and Communication at the Copenhagen Business School in Denmark. She joined CBS after 15 years at Roskilde University where she was Director of the Doctoral School of Social Sciences and Business and Professor of International Development Studies. Currently, she leads the research projects Commodifying Compassion: Implications of Turning People and Humanitarian Causes into Marketable Things (2016-2020), funded by the Danish Council for Independent Research (FSE) and Everyday Humanitarianism in Tanzania (2019-2024), funded by the Danish Development Research Council (FFU).

Among other books, she has authored Batman Saves Congo: Celebrity, Disruption and Neoliberal Development with Alexandra Budabin (forthcoming); Brand Aid: Shopping Well to Save the World with Stefano Ponte (2011); Population Politics and Development: From the Policies to the Clinics (2008) and edited Celebrity Humanitarianism and North-South Relations: Politics, Place and Power (2016).  She works in the areas of international aid and humanitarian politics, the aid business and commodification of causes, new transnational actors and alliances in the global South, development theories and representations, global health and gender. Lisa was the founding Vice-President of the Global South Caucus of the International Studies Association (ISA).

Reception
The lecture will be followed by a short reception in second floor in West, room 2V.088 from 16.00-17.00

Event Location

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