New Frontiers of Philanthro‐capitalism: Digital Technologies and
Humanitarianism
Ryan Burns
First published: 15 April 2019
https://doi.org/10.1111/anti.12534
Abstract
Digital technologies that allow large numbers of laypeople to
contribute to humanitarian action facilitate the deepening adoption
and adaptation of private‐sector logics and rationalities in
humanitarianism. This is increasingly taking place through
philanthro‐capitalism, a process in which philanthropy and
humanitarianism are made central to business models. Key to this
transformation is the way private businesses find supporting
“digital humanitarian” organisations such as Standby Task Force to
be amenable to their capital accumulation imperatives.
Private‐sector institutions channel feelings of closeness to aid
recipients that digital humanitarian technologies enable, in order
to legitimise their claims to “help” the recipients. This has
ultimately led to humanitarian and state institutions
re‐articulating capitalist logics in ways that reflect the new
digital humanitarian avenues of entry.
In this article, I characterise this process by drawing out three
capitalist logics that humanitarian and state institutions
re‐articulate in the context of digital humanitarianism, in an
emergent form of philanthro‐capitalism. Specifically, I argue that
branding, efficiency, and bottom lines take altered forms in this
context, in part being de‐politicised as a necessary condition for
their adoption. This de‐politicisation involves normalising these
logics by framing social and political problems as technical in
nature and thus both beyond critique and amenable to digital
humanitarian “solutions”. I take this line of argumentation to then
re‐politicise each of these logics and the capitalist relations that
they entail.