Datum
07. Oktober – 10. Oktober 2026
Invitation for open panel at 2026 4S Conference, Toronto, Canada
Invitation for open panel „ ‚Humanitarian Reset,’ Technopolitics and the Infrastructures of Aid”
2026 4S Conference
Toronto, Canada
October 7–10, 2026
Deadline for submission: April 30, 2026
4S Open Panel #111
Organizers:
Roda Siad, McGill University
Alphoncina Lyamuya, University of Southern California
Abstract:
In 2025, the UN’s Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs called for a ‘humanitarian reset’ amid proliferating crises, rising displacement, and shrinking donor funding. Framed as a radical reform moment, the ‘reset’ has emerged as a dominant term for grappling with profound sector-wide institutional stress. Initiatives such as UN80 and the ‘reset’ are positioned as opportunities to reimagine how aid is organized and delivered by streamlining coordination, embracing anticipatory action, prioritizing assistance, devolving authority to local actors, and mobilizing digital technologies and private sector partnerships to do “more with less.” Yet these reforms are not merely neutral or technical. They represent a reconfiguration of power within humanitarian systems, enacted through the reset as a techno-political project.
We invite scholars and practitioners working at the intersection of humanitarianism and science and technology studies to examine the reset, its promises, underlying assumptions, and how it is shaped by, and productive of, technopower. We ask: how are aid infrastructures, including data governance systems, cash delivery platforms, forecasting tools, prioritized aid mechanisms, and accountability frameworks, being redesigned under conditions of austerity and urgency? What sociotechnical imaginaries shape reforms proposed under the reset, and how are they entangled with ideas of efficiency, expertise, innovation, market logics, and new forms of public-private authority? How do calls to “shift power closer to communities” intersect with expanding technological mediation and data-intensive systems that may simultaneously enable and undermine local agency?
This panel foregrounds the reset as an ongoing, contested process rather than a settled reform agenda. Contributions may engage empirically, theoretically, or conceptually with topics including localization and accountability, anticipatory action and early warning systems, protection issues, humanitarian-corporate collaboration, activism, and advocacy under shrinking humanitarian footprints. We welcome submissions exploring tensions between efficiency and care, innovation and justice, decentralization and responsibility-shifting, and technocratic expertise and lived experiences.
Submission guidelines and additional panel details (panel #111) can be found here.