Making Wearables in Aid: Digital Bodies, Data and Gifts
Peer-reviewed Journal Article
Sandvik, Kristin Bergtora (2019) Making Wearables in Aid: Digital Bodies, Data and Gifts, Journal of Humanitarian Affairs 1(3).
This is an initial exploration of an emergent type of humanitarian goods – wearables for tracking and protecting
the health, safety and nutrition of aid recipients. Examining the constitutive process of ‘humanitarian wearables’,
the article reflects on the ambiguous position of digital humanitarian goods developed at the interface of
emergency response contexts, the digitisation of beneficiary bodies and the rise of data and private-sector
involvement in humanitarian aid. The article offers a set of contextual framings: first, it describes the proliferation
and capabilities of various tracking devices across societal domains; second, it gives a brief account of the history
of wristbands in refugee management and child nutrition; third, an inventory is given of prototype products and
their proposed uses in aid. It is argued that what needs to be understood is that, in ‘the making’ of humanitarian
wearables, the product is the data produced by digitised beneficiary bodies, not the wearables themselves.
Read the article here (Open Access)
Authors
Research Professor in Humanitarian Studies