Killing With Kindness
Killing With Kindness
Killing With Kindness
Killing with Kindness: Haiti, International Aid, and NGOs. Mark Schuller.
New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 2012. Pp. 256. $72.00 ðclothÞ;
$26.95 ðpaperÞ.
This ethnographic and sociopolitical study, set in Haiti during the 2004
coup and its aftermath and extending until just beyond the 2010 cata-
strophic earthquake, is crafted by a professor of African American Studies
and Anthropology at York College of City University of New York. Mark
Schuller has an impressive ability to carry the reader from the micro-
individual level of two devoted Haitian activists of separate nongovern-
mental organizations ðNGOsÞ to the national historical, political, social,
economic, and cultural environment of Haitians collectively, and ultimately
to the international and global macro realm, at which level he describes
and critiques the forces and organizations operating in Haiti. The pro-
gression of his analysis is largely chronological, interspersed with first-
person accounts, and he carefully elucidates Haiti’s modern political his-
tory. The bulk of Schuller’s work was conducted before the 2010 Haiti
quake, though the disaster is discussed briefly in the introduction, the con-
clusion, and in a few parts of interior chapters. The study makes obvious
why post-quake NGO aid has been so difficult to do both in the context of
Haiti today and given the current environment of international humani-
tarian assistance.
The book is a running and comprehensive comparative examination of
two Haitian NGOs, each manifesting different organizational structures
and styles, each dependent on different types of donors, and each with
different methods and tactics in providing humanitarian aid to the Hai-
tian people. Both NGOs administer and distribute development aid. How-
ever, the author demonstrates that the success, failure, or mixed results
achieved by each NGO at various times is influenced in large part ðbut
not exclusivelyÞ by the behavior, motives, and patience of outside donors:
some of them individual governments, some collective multinational gov-