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  • 5/5 - When “saving the world” is a source of dissatisfaction
    2024/10/22

    “Saving the world, or at least alleviating some of the world's pain, is supposed to be rewarding. But care and healthcare activities are also known to be the most exposed to professional stress and burn-out. What then is happening in the humanitarian sector, and more specifically at Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), a sector at the convergence of these two perspectives? How do international aid workers of this organization experience their missions?

    (Conclusion)

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    11 分
  • 4/5 - When “saving the world” is a source of dissatisfaction
    2024/10/22

    “Saving the world, or at least alleviating some of the world's pain, is supposed to be rewarding. But care and healthcare activities are also known to be the most exposed to professional stress and burn-out. What then is happening in the humanitarian sector, and more specifically at Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), a sector at the convergence of these two perspectives? How do international aid workers of this organization experience their missions?

    (Part 3 - People)

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    15 分
  • 3/5 - When “saving the world” is a source of dissatisfaction
    2024/10/22

    “Saving the world, or at least alleviating some of the world's pain, is supposed to be rewarding. But care and healthcare activities are also known to be the most exposed to professional stress and burn-out. What then is happening in the humanitarian sector, and more specifically at Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), a sector at the convergence of these two perspectives? How do international aid workers of this organization experience their missions?

    (Part 2 - Contexts)

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    11 分
  • 2/5 - When “saving the world” is a source of dissatisfaction
    2024/10/21

    “Saving the world, or at least alleviating some of the world's pain, is supposed to be rewarding. But care and healthcare activities are also known to be the most exposed to professional stress and burn-out. What then is happening in the humanitarian sector, and more specifically at Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), a sector at the convergence of these two perspectives? How do international aid workers of this organization experience their missions?

    (Part 1 - Definitions)

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    10 分
  • 1/5 - When “saving the world” is a source of dissatisfaction
    2024/10/21

    “Saving the world, or at least alleviating some of the world's pain, is supposed to be rewarding. But care and healthcare activities are also known to be the most exposed to professional stress and burn-out. What then is happening in the humanitarian sector, and more specifically at Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), a sector at the convergence of these two perspectives? How do international aid workers of this organization experience their missions?

    (Introduction)

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    7 分
  • (All at once) When “saving the world” is a source of dissatisfaction
    2024/10/21

    “Saving the world, or at least alleviating some of the world's pain, is supposed to be rewarding. But care and healthcare activities are also known to be the most exposed to professional stress and burn-out. What then is happening in the humanitarian sector, and more specifically at Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), a sector at the convergence of these two perspectives? How do international aid workers of this organization experience their missions?

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    8 分
  • Are doctors without borders doctors without a homeland?
    2024/10/20

    This podcast discusses the fact that humanitarian mission conditions limit local integration and the analytical article on which this podcast is based suggests three forms of attachment: home (“break expatriates”), elsewhere (“multi‑homeland expatriates”) or nowhere (“duty‑free expatriates”). For the latter, MSF plays, until their departure from the organization, the role of substitute homeland.

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    19 分
  • How to sanction without causing pain?
    2024/10/20

    In the humanitarian sector, dedicated to alleviating people’s suffering, how to qualify a misconduct and impose a potentially painful sanction? How can one judge, i.e. consider that everyone is responsible for their act, in a working area based on the fact that human inequalities are partly due to social determinisms? To what extent tolerating deviance is exacerbated and sentences are attenuated if not lifted? Where do the limits of the acceptable stop?

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    13 分